Virginia Permit Test Guide: Requirements, Score, and How to Pass
Virginia issues the learner's permit through the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), and the written knowledge exam is one of the more demanding in the country because of how it is graded. The test is built from the Virginia Driver's Manual and covers road signs and traffic laws in two separate parts, each with its own passing requirement.
This guide explains the age and parental consent rules, the documents the DMV asks for, exactly how the two-part exam is scored, what it costs, and how to study so you clear both parts in one visit. The figures here reflect current Virginia DMV rules, but confirm them on the official DMV website before your visit, since requirements can change.
What this guide covers
- How old you have to be
- Parental consent and what to bring
- How the two-part knowledge exam is scored
- Mastering the road signs portion
- What the traffic laws section covers
- Fees, retakes, and a study plan
How old you have to be
You can apply for a learner's permit in Virginia at 15 years and 6 months. The permit is the first step in Virginia's graduated licensing process, which moves a new driver from a permit to a provisional license and then to a full license as they meet milestones.
If you are under 18, you must hold the permit for at least nine months before you can get a driver's license, and you must complete a state-approved driver education program along with the required supervised driving hours, including night driving. Because that nine-month period starts when the permit is issued, passing the knowledge test soon after you become eligible keeps your timeline on track.
Parental consent and what to bring
Applicants under 18 need a parent or legal guardian to appear in person and sign the application giving consent. Virginia also verifies your identity, your Social Security number, your Virginia residency, and your legal presence, so bring originals or certified copies, not photocopies.
Virginia requires two proofs of residency for most applicants, so a single utility bill may not be enough. Checking the DMV's acceptable-documents list and bringing more than the minimum is the simplest way to avoid a wasted trip after you pass the test.
- Proof of identity, such as a certified birth certificate or valid passport
- Proof of your Social Security number
- Two proofs of Virginia residency
- Proof of legal presence in the United States
- A parent or legal guardian present to sign consent if you are under 18
How the two-part knowledge exam is scored
The Virginia knowledge exam has 35 questions split into two parts. The first part is a 10-question road signs section, and you must answer all of those questions to continue and pass that part. The second part is a 25-question traffic laws section. Overall you need 30 correct out of 35, which is 85 percent, to pass the exam.
That 85 percent bar is higher than most states require, so there is little room for guessing. The signs portion in particular leaves no margin in many testing setups, which is why focused study of road signs is so important for Virginia applicants.
Mastering the road signs portion
Because the signs section is unforgiving, learn signs by the shape-and-color system rather than memorizing each one. A red octagon is always stop, a downward triangle is yield, a yellow diamond is a warning, an orange diamond is a work zone, a white rectangle states a regulation, and a pentagon marks a school zone or crossing.
Drill the regulatory and warning signs until you can identify each on sight, including signs shown without any text. When you can name signs instantly, the strict signs requirement stops being the hardest part of the Virginia exam.
What the traffic laws section covers
The 25-question traffic laws section pulls from the Virginia Driver's Manual. Expect right-of-way at intersections and four-way stops, posted and basic speed limits, safe following distance, school bus stopping rules, Virginia's move-over law, and parking rules.
Impaired driving is also tested. Virginia enforces a zero-tolerance policy for drivers under 21, where a blood alcohol concentration of 0.02 or higher brings penalties, so understand the limits and consequences. With the overall 85 percent bar, broad familiarity with the manual matters more than deep knowledge of any single chapter.
Fees, retakes, and a study plan
The learner's permit carries a Virginia DMV fee paid when it is issued. The current amount is on the DMV website, so check it before your visit.
If you do not pass, Virginia allows retakes, though a waiting period may apply before you can try again. To prepare, read the Virginia Driver's Manual chapter by chapter, run focused road signs drills until you are near perfect, and finish with full-length 35-question practice tests graded against the 85 percent line. Because the bar is high, keep practicing until you are consistently scoring above 30 correct before you sit for the real exam.
FAQ
How many questions are on the Virginia permit test?
The Virginia knowledge exam has 35 questions, split into a 10-question road signs part and a 25-question traffic laws part. You need 30 correct out of 35, which is 85 percent, to pass.
What is the passing score for the Virginia knowledge test?
You need 85 percent, which is 30 correct out of 35. The road signs portion is especially strict, so focused sign study is important.
How old do you have to be to get a permit in Virginia?
You can apply at 15 years and 6 months. If you are under 18, you must hold the permit for at least nine months and complete driver education and supervised driving before getting a license.
Does a parent have to sign for a Virginia permit?
Yes. If you are under 18, a parent or legal guardian must appear in person to sign the application giving consent. Confirm the current document list on the Virginia DMV website before your visit.
About the author
Achyuth Kumar
Founder & Lead Researcher
Achyuth Kumar Maintainer of dmvmocktest.com in 2025 after watching friends and family struggle to study from dense state driver handbooks. He personally researches each state’s official handbook from the licensing agency, drafts the practice questions in his own words, writes the plain-language explanation that accompanies every answer, and re-checks each bank against the published handbook before it goes live. He has reviewed all 50 US state driver handbooks, the federal CDL manual, and the MUTCD road sign standard, and he updates the content whenever a state revises its rules. He is not a state employee and dmvmocktest.com is independent of every DMV.
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