Arizona Drivers Permit Practice Test 9
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
School bus rules are one of those Arizona permit test topics that seem easy right up until the question starts adding details. Maybe the road has two lanes. Maybe it is divided. Maybe the bus has its lights flashing and children are crossing, while traffic is moving the other way. At that point, “just stop for the bus” is not quite enough. This Arizona permit practice test gives you 20 questions focused on school bus safety, so you can work through the rules before they show up on the real AZ drivers permit test and start feeling a little less friendly. The official Arizona knowledge test has 30 questions, and you need 24 correct answers to pass. That is an 80% score, with only 6 questions you can afford to miss. If you take the Permit Test @ Home, you get 30 minutes. This AZ driving permit practice test keeps things smaller and more targeted: 20 questions, with 16 correct answers needed to pass. It is not the full official exam, obviously, but it is a useful gut check, and a pretty honest one, for whether you actually understand the school bus laws from the Arizona Driver License Manual. There is some licensing fine print worth keeping in your head, too, because Arizona does not hand out driving privileges on a handshake and a lucky guess. A graduated instruction permit is available at 15 years and 6 months. To move toward a Class G graduated driver license at 16, teen drivers must hold that permit for at least 6 months and complete supervised driving requirements. The standard route is 30 hours behind the wheel, including 10 at night. There is also an alternative after approved defensive driving or traffic survival school: 20 supervised hours, with 6 at night. And once you have that Class G license, the first 6 months still come with restrictions, including no driving from midnight to 5 a.m., no more than one passenger under 18, and limits on wireless-device use. Then there are the office-day realities. You will need a Social Security number, and drivers under 18 need parent or guardian approval. You'll need to pay the instruction permit fee ($7, so start saving). You should also expect a vision screening, because, well, being able to see the road is not exactly a bonus feature. Arizona generally requires at least 20/40 vision in one eye. Use this Arizona DMV practice test as a low-pressure way to sharpen the details before heading to the MVD. Whether you are driving in Phoenix, Tucson, Flagstaff, or somewhere quieter, the school bus rules do not bend much. Know when to stop, know why it matters, and do not treat those flashing lights like a suggestion.