Oregon Road Signs Test 2
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Oregon folds road signs into the regular Class C knowledge test, which is worth knowing before you start studying the wrong thing. There is no separate road-sign-only exam for the standard permit or noncommercial license. The signs show up inside the same 35-question test as traffic laws, safe driving rules, highway signs, signals, and the rest of the material pulled from the Oregon Driver Manual. To pass, you need 28 correct answers. That is 80%, and road sign questions count toward that same score like everything else. This Oregon road signs practice test gives you a focused place to work on that part of the exam without pretending signs are the whole story. It includes 20 multiple-choice questions covering the signs Oregon drivers are expected to recognize quickly: regulatory signs, warning signs, informational signs, stop and yield signs, no-parking signs, and those familiar highway markers that are easy to overlook when you only study the obvious ones. There is no time limit, so you can actually look at the sign, think through what it means, and notice the difference between “I know this” and “I have seen this before, probably, maybe.” And, yes, repetition helps. You can take this Oregon DMV practice test as many times as you need, which is exactly how sign recognition tends to stick. Miss one, see the explanation, miss it again because apparently your brain had other plans, and then finally remember it. The goal is not to fake your way through a cheat sheet. It is to get steady enough with road signs that the real Oregon DMV permit practice test material feels familiar instead of weirdly new. For teen drivers, the knowledge test is only one piece of the Oregon licensing process. Drivers ages 15, 16, and 17 start with a Provisional Instruction Permit, which requires the knowledge test, vision test, identity and address documents, a parent or legal guardian signature, the required fee, and the usual DMV photo. While driving with that permit, a teen must have a licensed driver at least 21 years old seated beside them. Before moving to a provisional license, the teen must hold the permit for at least 6 months and complete either an approved traffic safety education course plus 50 supervised driving hours, or 100 supervised hours without the course. Those supervised hours need to be with someone at least 21 who has had a valid license for at least 3 years. Adults have a cleaner route, though not a paperwork-free one. At 18 or older, an Oregon applicant may get an instruction permit or apply directly for a driver license. Adults are not tied to the teen permit holding period, supervised-hour requirement, provisional passenger limits, nighttime restrictions, or the under-18 mobile-device rule. They still need to satisfy DMV requirements for documents, vision screening, testing, fees, and the drive test when required. So this Oregon DMV sign test is best treated as targeted preparation. It sharpens the road sign piece, supports your broader Class C knowledge test study, and gives you a calmer, more reliable way to practice before the real exam.