Oklahoma DMV Sign Test 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Oklahoma road sign knowledge is one of those things drivers are expected to keep sharp, whether they are renewing a license, preparing for the written exam, or trying to get through the licensing process without losing momentum over a question that should have been familiar. This Oklahoma DMV sign test gives you a focused way to review the signs you are actually expected to recognize: colors, shapes, symbols, warnings, directions, and those regulatory signs that do not leave much room for interpretation. The test includes 20 multiple-choice questions and can be completed online whenever you have time, which is handy because official licensing requirements already come with enough moving parts. You answer, get immediate feedback, and see a clear explanation instead of just being told you missed it. That part matters. A red sign, a yellow warning sign, a green guide sign—these are not decorative details. They tell you what the road is doing, what you are allowed to do, and sometimes what you had better notice before the shoulder disappears or traffic gets weird. For teen drivers, this practice fits into Oklahoma’s Graduated Driver License program, which moves through the Student Driver, Learner Permit, Intermediate License, and Unrestricted License stages. A student driver can begin at 15 through approved driver education, and a learner permit also starts at 15 for those enrolled and receiving instruction in an approved course. At 16, driver education is optional for the written exam, although completing it can affect the timeline for moving into later license stages. Before an intermediate license, Oklahoma requires at least 180 days with a learner permit, 50 supervised driving hours with 10 at night, no traffic convictions, the free Oklahoma Work Zone Safe Course if under 18, and a passed drive test. So, yes, the signs are only one part of the whole process—but they are a part you can practice without needing a parent, an appointment, or a clean stretch of daylight. Adults applying for a first Class D license have a more direct path, but the basics still count: study the Oklahoma Driver Manual, pass the written test unless it is waived, complete the vision test, pass the drive test, bring the required documents, and pay the fee. This Oklahoma road signs practice test helps make that written-test material feel less fuzzy. Score 16 out of 20 to pass, read the explanations, and keep running through it until the signs feel automatic.