Texas Drivers License Practice Test 2

4.7 out of 5 (228 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
A Texas driver’s license practice test should do more than toss a few road signs at you and call it a day. The real DPS knowledge test is based on the Texas Driver Handbook, and it covers a wider stretch of material than many people expect: traffic laws, right-of-way, road signs, alcohol and drug rules, distracted driving, safe driving habits, vehicle equipment, and the basic responsibilities that come with having a license. That sounds like a tidy list. It is not always tidy when the questions start asking how those rules actually work in traffic. This Texas driving test practice is the second test in the series, with 20 carefully chosen questions that help you get used to the kind of thinking the official exam expects. The Texas Class C knowledge test is multiple choice, and the real version has 30 questions. You need 21 correct answers to pass, so there is room to miss a few, but not enough room to treat the handbook like background noise. Road signs are included, and yes, they matter beyond just recognizing the obvious ones. The practice test is useful for teens preparing for a learner license, adults applying for the first time, and older drivers who want to refresh what they know before dealing with DPS. Teen applicants generally need to be at least 15, be enrolled in or have completed approved driver education, pass the knowledge exam, pass the vision exam, and bring the required documents. Adults ages 18 to 24 have their own extra step, too: Texas requires a 6-hour adult driver education course for first-time applicants unless an exception applies. Applicants 25 and older are not required to complete driver education, though DPS still recommends it, and they still need to meet the testing and document requirements. There are transfer rules mixed in as well, because Texas does not treat every out-of-state situation the same. A new resident with a valid, unexpired out-of-state license may avoid some testing, but vehicle registration and insurance proof can still come into play. Teen transfers are more restricted and may still have to hold a Texas learner license for six months. Use this Texas permit test practice to find the weak spots before DPS finds them for you. It is free, focused, and built to make the official Texas drivers license test feel a lot less foggy.

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