Texas Permit Practice Test 5

4.8 out of 5 (164 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Texas DPS practice test starts where good prep should start: with the material you actually need to understand before you sit for the official exam. It uses 20 questions focused on driving under the influence, including Texas DUI rules, blood alcohol concentration limits, and the consequences that follow impaired driving. Not soft, general safety talk — the real legal stuff that can turn one bad decision into a license problem, a money problem, and, more seriously, a danger to everyone else on the road. The Texas drivers permit practice test is built to feel useful after more than one attempt, which matters more than people admit. It pulls from a larger pool of permit test questions, so you are not just memorizing the answer pattern from the last try and pretending that counts as studying. You get a better read on whether you understand the rule, the wording, and the kind of judgment Texas expects from drivers. A little repetitive? Sure, because studying is repetitive. But it should be repetitive in the right way, not just the lazy way. The official Texas knowledge test is where that preparation has to hold up. DUI questions can appear alongside signs, signals, right-of-way rules, speed laws, and other everyday driving topics, and the test is not really interested in whether you “mostly get it.” It asks for the rule as Texas defines it. That is why this Texas permit test practice stays tied to state-specific driving laws instead of drifting into generic driver-safety advice that could belong anywhere. Then there is the licensing process itself, which adult drivers should not treat as an afterthought. First-time applicants age 18 or older generally need to gather the required documents, schedule a DPS driver license office appointment, complete the application, provide proof of citizenship or lawful presence, Texas residency, identity, and Social Security information, and pay the fee. Some applicants may also need vehicle registration and insurance information. After that come the vision exam, knowledge test, and driving skills test. Age matters too, inconveniently but clearly. Adults ages 18 through 24 must complete a 6-hour adult driver education course before testing for a first Texas driver license. Adults 25 and older are not required to complete driver education. And if you use a third-party skills test, you need a valid restricted driver license, the Impact Texas Adult Drivers program, and an ITD certificate dated within 90 days of the driving test.

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