Wisconsin Temps Practice Test 9
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Practice Test 9 in our Wisconsin DMV practice test series stays on one subject: school buses. That is deliberate. Wisconsin drivers are expected to know when to stop, when to yield, and how to respond when children are getting on or off a bus, and those rules are not the place to rely on a half-remembered guess from driver’s ed. This Wisconsin temps practice test gives you 20 focused questions on school bus interactions, with a passing target of 16 correct answers. Conveniently, or maybe just mathematically, that matches the 80% standard Wisconsin uses on its official knowledge and road signs tests. The actual Class D knowledge test is broader. It has 50 questions, and you need 40 correct to pass. The road signs test is separate: 15 questions, with 12 correct required. Plan on about 45 minutes for testing at the DMV, which sounds manageable, and usually is, but it is still enough time for weak spots to become very obvious. A topic-specific Wisconsin permit practice test helps you catch those weak spots before the official screen is asking the questions and counting the misses. The questions here are based on the official Wisconsin drivers manual, which is exactly where your study time should be anchored. Not random internet lore, not someone’s cousin’s version of the rule, not an overbuilt “gotcha” question pretending to be helpful. The real DMV permit test comes from the manual, so this temporary license practice test keeps its attention there too. For teen drivers, the licensing path starts at age 15 with the instruction permit. Drivers ages 15 to 17 may take the Class D knowledge test online, but there are strings attached — a parent or guardian must monitor, the device has to be a laptop or desktop with a webcam, and phones and tablets are out. Online attempts cost $10 each, are offered in English and Spanish, and after two failed attempts, testing moves to a DMV service center. At the DMV, the knowledge and signs tests have no fee. After the permit, Wisconsin’s teen licensing requirements keep going: 6 months of permit holding, 6 violation-free months before the probationary license, 50 supervised driving hours including 10 at night, plus driver education with classroom, behind-the-wheel, and observation time. Adults have a shorter route, with a 7-day permit holding period and no required driver education or supervised hours, though first-time Class D drivers still need the road test. So this WI drivers temps practice test is test prep, yes. It is also rehearsal for the moment when a school bus stops, the lights come on, and the correct answer needs to be automatic.