Texas DMV Practice Test 9

4.8 out of 5 (126 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Texas DPS practice test starts with a very specific slice of driving knowledge: school bus safety. That is intentional. School bus rules are not the part of driving anyone brags about studying, fine, but they are the kind of rules you need to have nailed down before you are out there making decisions around flashing red lights, stopped buses, divided roads, impatient drivers behind you, and children who may or may not be paying attention. The test gives you 20 questions focused on when to stop, where to stop, and how Texas expects drivers to behave around school buses. You need 16 correct answers to pass this DPS permit practice test, and the real value is not just the score at the end. It is the review afterward — the small, slightly humbling moment where a missed question tells you exactly which part of the rule you blurred together. You can take the practice test again, slow down, and get the details straight without making the official test your first serious attempt. That is the sensible way to use it, honestly. The official Texas Class C knowledge test is a broader exam: 30 questions, with 21 correct answers required to pass. Road signs are included, and so are the regular traffic laws and safety rules new drivers are expected to understand before DPS moves them further through the process. So this Texas DMV permit practice test is not trying to replace the whole thing. It is more like tightening one important bolt before the larger machine starts shaking.   From there, the practice connects to the bigger Texas licensing path. Teen drivers can begin driver education at 14, apply for a learner license at 15, and move toward a provisional license at 16 after meeting the requirements. That includes a 6-month learner license period, 24 classroom hours, 7 hours of in-car observation, 7 hours behind the wheel, and 30 supervised practice hours, with 10 at night. A licensed driver age 21 or older has to supervise, and provisional drivers still face limits on passengers, nighttime driving from midnight to 5:00 a.m., and wireless device use under 18 — hands-free included, because Texas is not leaving that little loophole open. Adults have a shorter route, but not an empty one. Drivers 18 through 24 need a 6-hour adult driver education course, while drivers 25 and older are not required to take driver education. Before the skills test, applicants also need the 1-hour ITAD video, and the certificate is valid for 90 days. Add the residency documents, vision screening, fees, and DPS timing rules, and the point is pretty straightforward: practice first, test smarter, then deal with licensing with fewer surprises.

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