Alabama Road Signs Test

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
10 Questions
2 Mistakes allowed
If you’re studying for the Alabama learner’s permit test, the road signs are not the part to treat casually. They look simple enough, sure. A Stop sign means stop, right? But then the test bring sup school zones, railroad crossings, no-passing zones, pavement markings, warning signs, traffic signals, and those guide signs that seem harmless until you realize you only half-read them. That is where this Alabama permit practice test earns its keep. Alabama driver licensing runs through the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, Department of Public Safety, Driver License Division, and the official knowledge test is based on the Alabama Driver Manual. So, yes, the manual matters. The real exam pulls from Alabama traffic laws, road signs, safe-driving rules, and the rest of the material tucked into that manual. Not glamorous reading, exactly, but useful. Very useful, actually, when you are sitting at the testing station and trying not to second-guess a sign you have seen a thousand times from a passenger seat. This Alabama DMV signs practice test gives you 20 multiple-choice questions focused on the signs and signals Alabama drivers need to recognize without staring at them like they are a riddle. You will see the familiar stuff, like Stop and Yield, but also regulatory signs, warning signs, informational signs, pavement markings, traffic signals, school zone signs, railroad crossing signs, and roundabout-related rules. A little dry? Maybe. Important? Absolutely. Alabama does not have a separate road-sign-only test for a standard Class D learner license, so those questions are folded into the main Alabama knowledge test and count toward your overall score. Many Alabama permit test providers use a 30-question format, where 24 correct answers are needed to pass. That is an 80% passing score, with only 6 misses to spare, which is not exactly a huge cushion if signs are your weak spot. The instant feedback helps, because it shows where you are solid and where you are bluffing a little. Better to find that out here than after paying the official $5 knowledge-test fee, and better to know before test day that ALEA says checks are not accepted, before you dust off your checkbook, assuming you even know what that is. Take the practice test, miss the annoying questions now, and get more comfortable with the signs, signals, and road rules you will need at the office and on Alabama roads afterward.
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