Arizona DMV Sign Test 3

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Arizona road signs have a way of looking obvious right up until the test asks about one you have not thought about since, well, ever. And yes, they matter. Road sign questions are part of the official Arizona written knowledge test, mixed in with traffic laws, signals, pavement markings, lane rules, emergency vehicle rules, railroad crossings, and all the other little details that suddenly feel less little when you are sitting there taking the AZ permit test. This Arizona road signs practice test keeps the focus tight: 20 questions on the signs, shapes, colors, symbols, and meanings Arizona drivers are expected to know. You will see the usual suspects, like the octagonal stop sign, the triangular yield sign, warning signs, work zone signs, lane-control signs, and those rectangular regulatory or informational signs that are easy to skim past in real life. Not ideal, but very human. The point is to make those signs feel familiar before they show up on the real Arizona DMV practice test, not after. A passing score on this AZ permit practice test is 16 out of 20. On the official Arizona written knowledge test, road sign questions count within the full 30-question test, and there is no separate published missed-question limit just for signs. That is worth knowing, because a few shaky sign questions can quietly eat into your score. Nobody needs that kind of drama at the MVD. After each attempt, you will get a review of the questions you missed and the correct answers, which is where the useful stuff usually happens. Guessing once is understandable. Guessing the same sign three times is your cue to slow down, review it, and maybe admit that pavement markings are more annoying than you wanted them to be. Also, passing the written test is not the whole process. Arizona requires a vision screening before issuing an instruction permit or driver license, with a standard of 20/40 vision in at least one eye. Glasses or contacts can be used, though a corrective-lens restriction may apply. Official Arizona materials are available in English and Spanish, while road test instructions are given in English. So study the signs, know the rules, and walk in prepared for the rest of it too.
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