DMV Practice Tests by State

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Every state writes its own written knowledge test, which is why the number of questions, the passing score, and even the topics emphasized are different depending on where you live. Some states ask as few as 18 questions while others ask 50, and passing scores range from roughly 70% to 88%. That is why practicing with questions built around your own state’s format matters: the test you rehearse should look like the test you take.

All 50 states below are live, free, and require no account. Each card shows the state’s question count and passing score, with links to the practice test, the step-by-step permit guide, and the official driver handbook. Questions are original educational examples based on official handbook topics; they are not the actual official exam questions.

California

Available

46 questions · pass with 38 correct (83%)

Texas

Available

30 questions · pass with 21 correct (70%)

Florida

Available

50 questions · pass with 40 correct (80%)

New York

Available

20 questions · pass with 14 correct (70%)

Pennsylvania

Available

18 questions · pass with 15 correct (83%)

Ohio

Available

40 questions · pass with 30 correct (75%)

Georgia

Available

40 questions · pass with 30 correct (75%)

North Carolina

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Alabama

Available

30 questions · pass with 24 correct (80%)

Alaska

Available

20 questions · pass with 16 correct (80%)

Arizona

Available

30 questions · pass with 24 correct (80%)

Arkansas

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Colorado

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Connecticut

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Delaware

Available

30 questions · pass with 23 correct (77%)

Hawaii

Available

30 questions · pass with 24 correct (80%)

Idaho

Available

40 questions · pass with 34 correct (85%)

Indiana

Available

50 questions · pass with 40 correct (80%)

Iowa

Available

35 questions · pass with 28 correct (80%)

Kansas

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Kentucky

Available

40 questions · pass with 32 correct (80%)

Louisiana

Available

40 questions · pass with 32 correct (80%)

Maine

Available

30 questions · pass with 24 correct (80%)

Maryland

Available

25 questions · pass with 22 correct (88%)

Massachusetts

Available

25 questions · pass with 18 correct (72%)

Minnesota

Available

40 questions · pass with 32 correct (80%)

Mississippi

Available

30 questions · pass with 24 correct (80%)

Missouri

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Montana

Available

33 questions · pass with 27 correct (80%)

Nebraska

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Nevada

Available

50 questions · pass with 40 correct (80%)

New Hampshire

Available

40 questions · pass with 32 correct (80%)

New Jersey

Available

50 questions · pass with 40 correct (80%)

New Mexico

Available

25 questions · pass with 18 correct (72%)

North Dakota

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Oklahoma

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Oregon

Available

35 questions · pass with 28 correct (80%)

Rhode Island

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

South Carolina

Available

30 questions · pass with 24 correct (80%)

South Dakota

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Tennessee

Available

30 questions · pass with 24 correct (80%)

Utah

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Vermont

Available

20 questions · pass with 16 correct (80%)

Virginia

Available

35 questions · pass with 30 correct (85%)

Washington

Available

40 questions · pass with 32 correct (80%)

West Virginia

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Wisconsin

Available

50 questions · pass with 40 correct (80%)

Wyoming

Available

25 questions · pass with 20 correct (80%)

Keep studying

Beyond your state test, the highest-yield topics to review are road signs, traffic signals, the permit test study guide, and the official DMV handbooks. DMV requirements can change, so always confirm current rules with your official state agency before visiting.