Texas Drivers License Test 7
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Before you walk into the Texas DPS permit test it helps to know what the test is actually trying to measure. It is pulled from the Texas Driver Handbook and it covers more than road signs and “who goes first at a four-way stop.” You are expected to know Texas traffic laws, right-of-way rules, safe driving habits, distracted driving basics, alcohol and drug laws, vehicle equipment, and the proof-of-insurance piece that Texas takes seriously, because of course it does. This seventh Texas DPS practice test gives you 20 questions aimed at that exact mix. It does not use real DPS test questions, since Texas does not publish those, but it is written to feel close to the real Texas DMV permit test experience: similar topics, similar phrasing, and the same kind of small-but-important details that tend to separate guessing from actually being ready. Some questions may feel straightforward. Others make you slow down a little, which is sort of the point. For context, the official Texas Class C knowledge test is multiple choice, and the practical format is 30 questions with a passing score of 21 correct answers, or 70%. Road signs are included in the knowledge test, not handed off to some separate road-sign-only exam for regular Class C applicants. So a useful Texas DMV practice test should not just drill signs in isolation or throw random rule trivia at you. It should move between signs, road rules, judgment, legal requirements, and the boring paperwork-adjacent facts that still matter when you are trying to get licensed. This Texas driving test practice is a good fit for teen applicants working through driver education, adults getting licensed for the first time, and anyone who would rather find the weak spots here than discover them at a driver license office appointment. Use it like a rehearsal, but not a lazy one. If you can consistently handle these questions and understand why the answers are right, the real DPS permit test should feel a lot less like a guessing game and a lot more like something you already saw coming.