Texas Drivers Ed Practice Test 8
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Texas intersection questions deserve more attention than most people give them. Not because they are wildly complicated, exactly, but because they combine several rules at once — right-of-way, signs, lane position, timing, and that small moment of hesitation when two drivers both think the other one should move first. This Texas drivers ed practice test puts those moments under a brighter light, with 20 multiple-choice questions built around four-way stops, urban intersections, rural crossings, and the kinds of traffic situations that can get a little weird in real driving. The Texas permit test is based on the Texas Driver Handbook published by the Department of Public Safety, so the material is not floating around in mystery-land. DPS expects applicants to understand Texas traffic laws, road signs, safe driving practices, alcohol and drug rules, distracted driving, vehicle equipment, and driver responsibility. Intersections sit right in the middle of all that. A single question might ask about a stop sign, but really it is also testing whether you know who yields, what the other vehicle is likely to do, and whether you noticed the lane setup before answering too quickly. This DPS practice test keeps the focus practical. The questions are written as driving scenarios instead of flat trivia, and the visual learning aids help make the layout clear — which matters, because trying to untangle a busy intersection from words alone can feel like reading furniture assembly instructions with one screw missing. You can take the practice permit test online from a desktop or phone, so it fits into those odd little study windows people actually have. For the Texas Class C knowledge test, the format is multiple choice. The test is commonly described as 30 questions, with 21 correct answers needed to pass, which is 70%. That also means you can miss up to 9 questions, though treating all 9 as a comfort blanket is not exactly a master plan. Road sign questions are included, and depending on your situation, the knowledge exam may be completed through an approved driver education course or taken at a driver license office. Licensing requirements shift by applicant type. Teens must be at least 15 to apply for a learner license and need approved driver education. First-time applicants ages 18 through 24 must complete a 6-hour adult driver education course unless an exception applies. Applicants 25 and older are not required to take driver education, although DPS recommends it for first-time drivers. This Texas driving test practice is built to help you study the rules, but also to slow down and think like a driver before the real test starts.