Vermont DMV Sign Test 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
A solid Vermont DMV signs practice test should do more than flash a few sign pictures at you. This one gives you 20 multiple-choice questions focused on road signs, sign shapes, colors, meanings, and the small distinctions that can trip people up when they have not looked at the material in a while. You need 16 correct answers to pass, and because the test is untimed, you can actually study the question in front of you instead of racing through it like the DMV is standing behind you with a stopwatch. It is a practice test, yes, but it works best when you treat it like a quick diagnostic: what do you know cold, what looks familiar-but-not-quite, and what needs another look before test day. That matters in Vermont because road sign knowledge sits inside the larger licensing process, not off in its own little corner. A learner permit is available at age 15, and applicants who are 15, 16, or 17 need parent or guardian permission unless they are emancipated. Once the online permit test is passed and the required fees are paid, a permit holder may drive in Vermont with a qualified, licensed, unimpaired supervising driver seated beside them. That supervisor may be a parent or guardian, a certified driver education instructor, or a licensed unimpaired adult at least 25 years old. And yes, the permit has to be carried while driving; it is a plain rule, but plain rules have a way of becoming important at exactly the wrong moment. For 16- and 17-year-olds, Vermont’s Graduated Driver’s License program adds more structure. Before a Junior Driver’s License, teens must complete an approved driver education course with 30 classroom hours, 6 hours behind the wheel, and 6 hours of observation. They also need 40 additional practice hours, including 10 at night. Adults have a more direct path: a valid learner permit, a road test appointment, a qualified accompanying driver, a legal insured vehicle with valid registration, and a passing road test. No teen driver education course, no 40-hour teen practice log. So, use this Vermont road signs test the practical way. Work through the questions, read the hints, review the explanations after missed answers, and pay attention to the signs you almost got right. Those are usually the ones worth studying twice.