Texas Road Signs Practice Test 3
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
A Texas DMV road sign test deserves more attention than most people give it, mostly because road signs are baked directly into the Texas driver license knowledge test. DPS builds that test from the Texas Driver Handbook, and the official material does not stop at signs. It also gets into traffic laws, right-of-way, safe driving habits, distracted driving, alcohol and drug rules, vehicle equipment, and driver responsibility. So this Texas permit test practice is not floating off by itself somewhere. It fits into the same knowledge base you are expected to understand before Texas will move you further along in the licensing process. This Texas DPS road signs test keeps the focus where a lot of missed points tend to happen: sign shape, sign meaning, and the little differences between answers that seem obvious when you are studying but somehow less obvious when the screen is asking for one correct choice. An octagon means stop. A triangle means yield. Rectangular signs may regulate, guide, or give information, which is a broad little category, and honestly that is where some drivers get sloppy. The point is not to stare at a sign until you remember a label. The point is to know what the sign is telling you to do while you are actually driving, with traffic moving around you and no one politely waiting for you to think it over. For ordinary noncommercial Class C applicants, Texas does not use a separate road-sign-only test. Road sign questions are part of the main knowledge test. The practical learner-facing format is 30 multiple-choice questions, and passing means answering at least 21 correctly, or 70%. That gives you room to miss up to 9, but not much room to treat the sign section like filler. Some students handle the knowledge test through an approved driver education course. Others, including teen applicants who did not complete the exam during the classroom portion of driver education, take it at the driver license office. And then there is the rest of the licensing trail, because of course there is. Teen applicants may need a Verification of Enrollment and Attendance form. Drivers must complete the appropriate Impact Texas Drivers program before the driving skills test. Adults and new Texas residents may need registration and insurance documents, or a statement that they do not own a vehicle. This DMV sign test helps clean up one important piece of that process early, before the paperwork, appointments, and test-day nerves start piling on.