West Virginia Permit Practice Test 6
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Our sixth WV practice permit test gives you 20 questions with a practical goal: answer at least 16 correctly and prove you are getting close to real test readiness. This version puts a clear focus on turn signals, which is one of those topics that can seem too basic to study until you realize how often it shows up in actual driving decisions. Turning, changing lanes, merging, pulling from a curb, entering traffic — the signal is not decoration. It is the part of the maneuver that tells everyone else what you are about to do, assuming you use it early enough and in the right situation. The test is free to take on a phone, desktop, or app, but the better reason to use it is that it gives you repeated contact with West Virginia permit test wording. Some questions will feel straightforward. Others may ask about a familiar rule from a slightly different angle, and that is where practice starts doing its work. A good WV practice permit test should not just hand you a score and send you away. It should make weak spots easier to see before the official DMV knowledge test makes them expensive, inconvenient, and a little embarrassing. For younger drivers, this practice test also belongs to a larger licensing path. West Virginia’s Graduated Driver Licensing program begins with the Level 1 GDL Instruction Permit at age 15. To get it, an applicant must pass the vision screening and knowledge test, provide a valid School Driver Eligibility Certificate, and have parent or legal guardian consent unless the marriage-certificate exception applies. After that, the rules are fairly strict. A licensed driver age 21 or older must sit in the right front passenger seat, driving is limited to 5:00 a.m. through 10:00 p.m., and the permit holder has to follow passenger limits, seat belt requirements, zero-alcohol rules, and the ban on wireless device use except for calling 911. And then, because the permit is only the first step, Level 2 has its own conditions. A driver must be at least 16, hold Level 1 for 180 consecutive conviction-free days, pass the road skills test, and either complete 50 supervised driving hours, including 10 at night, or finish an approved West Virginia Department of Education driver education course. Level 2 allows more independence, although nighttime limits, passenger restrictions, and conviction-free driving still matter before Level 3 becomes available at age 17. So the practice test is not just a warm-up for the exam. It is a clean way to put the rules, the timing, and the actual driving expectations into your head before West Virginia starts holding you to them.