Arizona Drivers Ed Practice Test 8
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Intersections are where Arizona driving rules get real, fast. A four-way stop can look simple until two cars roll up together, someone waves when they should not, and suddenly everyone is doing that little hesitation dance through the windshield. This AZ drivers ed practice test, the eighth test in the series, focuses on those exact moments: right-of-way, yielding, turning through traffic, reading signs and signals, and knowing when “I think I can go” is not quite good enough. The test gives you 20 multiple-choice questions built around Arizona intersection rules and the kind of situations that show up both on the written exam and, more importantly, in actual traffic. It is not trying to bury you in trivia. It is trying to make the rules feel familiar before the DMV asks about them in its very DMV-ish way. While you work through the questions, you can use hints when you need a small nudge, and if you miss an answer, the explanation walks you back through the rule so it has a better chance of sticking. Not glamorous, no. Useful, yes. For teen drivers, this Arizona practice permit test fits into the larger graduated licensing process. Arizona allows teens to apply for a graduated instruction permit at 15 years and 6 months, and a Class G graduated driver license can be issued at age 16 for drivers who are under 18. Before that Class G license happens, though, Arizona expects real preparation: an approved driver education program, an approved defensive driving or traffic survival school route with certified supervised driving hours, or parent-certified supervised practice that includes required nighttime driving. Also, because the paperwork matters, minors need a parent or guardian signature on the permit or license application, witnessed by an MVD agent or notarized. Adults have a different path. At 18 or older, a first-time driver may apply for an Arizona operator instruction permit and work toward a Class D license by completing the application, bringing the required identity, residency, Social Security, and authorized-presence documents, paying the fee, passing the written permit test and vision screening, and then passing the road test in a properly registered and insured vehicle. This AZ DMV practice test is updated for current laws and can be retaken as often as needed. That repetition matters. Intersection rules are not the part you want to “sort of” understand on test day, or on a Tuesday afternoon in real traffic.