Alaska DMV Practice Test 7
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
The Alaska DMV practice test is a good place to get serious before the real General Knowledge Test starts asking questions with a clock running in the background. The official test gives you 20 questions and 25 minutes, and you need 16 correct answers to pass. That is 80%, which sounds friendly enough until you remember it means you can miss only 4. Not 5. Four. So yes, it is worth knowing the material before you sit down for the actual Alaska DMV test. This practice test follows that 20-question structure and keeps the focus where it belongs: road signs, traffic laws, safe driving judgment, proof of insurance, and the everyday rules that decide whether you are actually ready to drive in Alaska. And Alaska is not exactly a flat little loop around the block. Driving from Anchorage to a smaller rural community, or dealing with dark roads, weather shifts, and long stretches between services, has a way of making “general knowledge” feel a lot less general. The real knowledge test may be taken online through KnowTo Drive, provided you use a desktop or laptop with internet access and a front-facing camera or webcam. Touch devices are not supported, because apparently even testing platforms have their limits. You can also test through Alaska DMV offices or approved proctor locations, including DMV business partners, schools, police departments, Troopers, Village Public Safety Officers, and some government offices. That setup matters, especially for rural drivers who do not have a DMV office conveniently sitting ten minutes away. The same general knowledge test structure applies to first-time Class D permit and license applicants. Alaska applicants can apply for an instruction permit at age 14, with parental consent and the required documents, vision test, fee, and written test. Teens moving toward a provisional license need more than a lucky test score; they must hold a permit for at least 6 months, avoid recent violations or suspensions, complete 40 hours of driving practice, including 10 in progressively challenging circumstances, and pass the road test. Adults still need the required documents, knowledge test, vision test, road test unless exempt, and applicable fees. Use this Alaska practice permit test to slow down, make mistakes here instead of at the DMV, and build the kind of rule knowledge that holds up when the road gets messy, which, in Alaska, is not exactly rare.