Texas Road Signs Test 2
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Texas road signs practice test is built for the part of studying that people often rush through, even though DPS absolutely expects you to know it. The signs are familiar, sure, but familiar is not the same as ready. A red sign telling you what not to do, a yellow warning sign giving you just enough notice to adjust, a green guide sign pointing you through a mess of exits — these are the things Texas drivers read constantly, sometimes without thinking, and that is exactly why they need to be practiced with some care. You’ll work through 20 multiple-choice questions based on the Texas Driver Handbook, with signs chosen to reflect what shows up on real Texas roads and in Texas permit test practice. Regulatory signs, warning signs, guide signs, construction-zone signs, odd shapes, colors, symbols, the whole slightly overstuffed road-sign universe. It is not about memorizing one stop sign and calling yourself prepared. It is about getting comfortable with the visual language DPS expects you to recognize quickly, because on the road, nobody politely pauses traffic while you debate what a sign probably meant. For the actual Texas Class C knowledge test, road signs are tested as part of the main knowledge exam. There is not a separate road-sign-only test for ordinary noncommercial applicants. The practical format is 30 multiple-choice questions, and you need 21 correct answers to pass, which is 70%. That leaves room to miss up to 9 questions, technically, but burning those misses on signs is a sloppy way to do it. Some applicants take the knowledge exam through an approved driver education course; others take it at a Texas driver license office. Either path still leads through the same basic expectation: know the rules, know the signs, and do not treat either one like filler. The licensing process has a few more moving parts, naturally. Applicants may need a completed application, proof of identity, lawful presence, Social Security information, Texas residency documents, a photo, thumbprints, the required fee, and a vision exam. Teen applicants usually bring driver education paperwork too, including the DE-964 and school enrollment documentation. So, yes, there is paperwork. There always is. But this Texas road signs test keeps one piece of the process clear and manageable: practice the signs now, understand how they fit into the full Texas DPS knowledge test, and walk into the licensing process with fewer loose ends rattling around.