Washington Drivers Ed Practice Test 8

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Washington DOL practice test gives you a direct way to work through the rules that actually trip people up: intersections, right-of-way, and four-way stops. It is a 20-question multiple-choice Washington driver ed practice test, and you will need 16 correct answers to pass. That sounds tidy enough, but intersection questions can get a little slippery because they are rarely just about memorizing a sentence from the manual. They ask whether you understand timing, vehicle position, who arrived first, who is turning, and who needs to yield when everyone seems to be doing something at once. For teen drivers, this practice fits into Washington’s larger licensing path. Drivers ages 16 and 17 move through an instruction permit, then an intermediate driver license, before restrictions lift at age 18. A teen may apply for a permit at 15 if enrolled in an approved driver training course, or at 15½ after passing the knowledge test if not enrolled. Before applying for a first license at 16 or 17, the state expects more than a quick pass on a screen. You need to hold the permit for at least 6 months, complete approved driver training, log 40 hours of daylight practice and 10 hours at night, pass the knowledge test and the driving skills test, and keep your record clear of certain violations. So, yes, a Washington drivers ed practice test is partly about preparing for the DMV permit test. But it is also rehearsal for the habits you are supposed to carry into supervised driving and, eventually, the drive test itself. Washington requires a score of at least 80 out of 100 on the drive test, and intersection judgment is exactly the kind of thing that can show whether a driver is thinking ahead or just reacting late. Adult first-time drivers follow a different route. At 18 or older, Washington does not require teen driver training, the 6-month permit holding period, or the supervised hour totals. Adults still need to pass the required knowledge and drive tests unless they qualify for an exemption, and anyone who wants to practice on public roads before the drive test must use a learner permit with a licensed driver who has at least 5 years of experience seated in the front passenger seat. The real Washington DMV permit test questions are not published, and this practice test does not pretend otherwise. What it does offer is focused, realistic review of the rules you are expected to know, especially the intersection scenarios where careful reading and practical judgment matter more than guessing fast.
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