Free Mississippi DMV Practice Test 2026

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The Mississippi knowledge test is the first step toward a learner's permit, and it is administered by the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) through its Driver Service Bureau. The exam checks that you understand road signs, traffic signals, right-of-way, and the safe-driving basics the state expects before you start practicing behind the wheel. This free practice test mirrors that experience so the official exam feels familiar instead of intimidating.

In Mississippi you answer 30 multiple-choice questions and need 24 correct to pass, which is 80 percent. That means you can miss no more than six, so consistent preparation pays off. Take this practice test as often as you like, read the explanation after each question, and aim to walk into the Driver Service Bureau already confident in the material.

Passing score

80% to pass

24

of 30 correct

You can miss up to 6 questions and still pass.

DPS

Agency

30

Questions

24 (80%)

To pass

15

Permit age

Key takeaways

  • The Mississippi written test has 30 questions and you need 24 correct (80%) to pass.
  • Questions are drawn from the official Mississippi Department of Public Safety handbook and cover road signs, traffic laws, and safe driving.
  • You can apply for a permit at 15.
  • Practice in two modes: learn with instant explanations, then simulate the real exam under a timer.

Sample Mississippi permit test questions

Here are a few real questions from our Mississippi bank, with the correct answer and a plain-language explanation. The full test has many more.

  • Road SignsEasy

    1. A red octagonal sign at an intersection means:

    • Come to a complete stop before the stop line or crosswalk
    • Slow down only if other cars are present
    • Yield to traffic and keep rolling
    • Proceed if the road ahead is clear

    Why: A red octagon is always a stop sign and requires a full stop before the stop line, crosswalk, or intersection.

  • Traffic SignalsEasy

    2. A steady red traffic light means:

    • Slow down and proceed with care
    • Stop only if pedestrians are present
    • Yield to the right
    • Stop and remain stopped until the light turns green

    Why: A steady red light requires a full stop; remain stopped until the signal turns green and the way is clear.

  • Traffic LawsEasy

    3. Seat belts in a moving vehicle should be worn by:

    • Only the driver
    • The driver and all passengers
    • Only front-seat occupants
    • Only on the highway

    Why: Wearing a seat belt greatly reduces injury risk; drivers and passengers should be belted at all times.

  • Right-of-WayMedium

    4. At a four-way stop where two vehicles arrive at the same time:

    • The faster vehicle goes first
    • The larger vehicle goes first
    • The first to honk goes
    • The driver on the left yields to the driver on the right

    Why: When two vehicles reach an all-way stop together, the driver on the left yields to the driver on the right.

What’s on the Mississippi test

Our Mississippi question bank is balanced across the categories the DPS tests. These are the topics to study:

Road Signs18Traffic Signals8Traffic Laws6Safe Driving5Right-of-Way4Pavement Markings4Speed Limits2Parking Rules1Alcohol and Drugs1Emergencies1Sharing the Road1Driver Responsibility1

How the Mississippi written test works

The DPS draws your 30 questions from the official Mississippi Driver's Manual. The questions cover signs, signals, pavement markings, right-of-way, speed, parking, and safe driving, so a narrow study plan will leave gaps. Because you need 24 of 30 correct, careful reading matters: with only six misses allowed, slowing down to read every option is well worth the time.

Most applicants take the knowledge test as the first stage of Mississippi's graduated licensing process. Passing earns the learner's permit and unlocks supervised practice rather than full driving privileges. Confirm the current testing procedure and any appointment requirements with the Driver Service Bureau before your visit.

What to study

Concentrate first on the categories that produce the most questions and cause the most confusion. Sign shapes and colors, signal meanings, and right-of-way order are dependable, high-value topics to master early.

  • Road signs grouped by shape and color, including warning and regulatory signs
  • Traffic signals, including steady and flashing lights and green and red arrows
  • Right-of-way at four-way stops, crosswalks, roundabouts, and uncontrolled intersections
  • Speed limits, safe following distance, and school-zone and work-zone rules
  • Pavement markings such as solid and broken yellow and white lines and stop lines

Practice Mode vs Exam Mode

Practice Mode teaches as you go: each question is followed by the correct answer and a short explanation, so you learn from mistakes immediately. Exam Mode hides the answers and recreates the 30-question format for a realistic rehearsal. Drill in Practice Mode until your weak categories feel solid, then switch to Exam Mode to confirm you can clear 80 percent under test-like conditions.

Rural roads and weather in Mississippi

Mississippi has many two-lane rural highways where passing zones, no-passing zones, and animal crossings all come into play, so expect questions on solid and broken yellow lines and on scanning the road ahead. The state also sees heavy rain, thunderstorms, and occasional fog, which reduce traction and visibility. The test rewards drivers who know to slow down, increase following distance, and use headlights in poor conditions, and who never drive through flooded roadways.

Road signs show up on every test

Learn to read signs by shape and color and you bank easy points. Here are a few you should know cold:

STOPYIELD⟋⟍SCHOOLSPEEDLIMIT55RR

What to study for the Mississippi written test

  • Road signs and signals, including arrows and flashing lights
  • Right-of-way rules at intersections, crosswalks, and roundabouts
  • Speed limits, school zones, and work zones
  • Parking rules and pavement markings
  • Alcohol, drugs, and safe-driving fundamentals

Mississippi test day checklist

  • Proof of identity, Social Security number, and Mississippi residency
  • Any required parental consent or school-related form
  • Your application and the testing fee
  • Eyeglasses or contact lenses if you need them for the vision screening

How Mississippi compares

Mississippi test requirements compared to a typical state
RequirementMississippiTypical US state
Questions on the test3020–50
Correct answers to pass24Varies
Passing score80%70–85%
Earliest permit age1515–16

What happens if you do not pass the Mississippi test?

Missing the cutoff is not the end of the road. The Mississippi written test requires 24 correct answers out of 30 (80%), so you can miss up to 6 questions and still pass. If you score below that line, you are allowed to retake the exam. Most states ask you to wait a short period before trying again, often the same day, the next day, or after a few days, and a small retest fee may apply. The exact waiting period and any fee are set by the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, so confirm the current policy with them before you return.

The smartest move after a near miss is to study the specific topics that tripped you up rather than starting over from scratch. Our results page shows which categories pulled your score down, so you can focus your next session on road signs, right-of-way, or whichever area needs work. Take the free Mississippi practice test a few more times until you are scoring comfortably above 80%, then schedule your retake with confidence.

Official Mississippi DMV resources

Always confirm the current rules with the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS).

Keep preparing

Mississippi permit test FAQ

How many questions are on the Mississippi permit test?

The Mississippi knowledge test has 30 multiple-choice questions, and you must answer 24 correctly to pass.

What score do I need to pass in Mississippi?

You need at least 80 percent, which is 24 out of 30 questions. You can miss no more than six.

How old do I have to be to get a permit in Mississippi?

You can generally apply at 15. Confirm the current age and program rules with the Mississippi Department of Public Safety.

Are these the official Mississippi test questions?

No. These are original practice questions written to match the style and topics of the real exam. Always study the official Mississippi Driver's Manual as well.

Is this Mississippi practice test free?

Yes. It is completely free to use, with no account required.

Can I retake the practice test as many times as I want?

Yes. Each attempt draws a fresh, randomized set of questions, so you can practice until you feel confident.

Sources

We summarize public information from the Mississippi Department of Public Safety in our own words. Confirm details with the official source: