Colorado Practice Permit Test 3
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Getting ready for the Colorado permit test is one of those things that sounds simple until you realize the official exam is not just asking whether you can recognize a Stop sign. It wants to know whether you actually understand Colorado traffic laws, road signs, signals, pavement markings, safe driving habits, impaired driving rules, and all the little “yes, this matters” details that tend to blur together when you are staring at the Colorado Driver Handbook for too long. That is where this third Colorado practice permit test earns its keep. It gives you 20 multiple-choice and true/false questions in a calmer, less DMV-ish setting, which is helpful because, frankly, nobody does their best thinking while imagining a clerk calling their number. You will review the same general territory covered on the official Class D knowledge test, including rules of the road, sharing the road, driver responsibility, crash prevention, and distracted driving. And yes, handheld mobile devices come up, because Colorado takes that seriously—and so should you, even if your phone is being very dramatic in the cup holder. The real Colorado knowledge test has 25 multiple-choice questions, and you need 20 correct answers to pass. That is an 80% score. This Colorado permit test practice keeps that same standard in a shorter format: answer 16 out of 20 correctly, and you are in good shape for this round. Not perfect, not magically licensed, but definitely moving in the right direction. Road signs are included here too, not because Colorado has a separate road-sign-only test, but because sign questions are part of the regular permit exam. The visual aids help with that, especially when a question is easier to understand by seeing the sign, marking, or driving situation instead of trying to decode a block of text like it is a riddle from a very safety-conscious wizard. A few licensing details are worth keeping in your head while you study. Colorado allows learner’s permits starting at age 15, though younger applicants have driver education or driver awareness requirements. Drivers under 18 must hold a permit for at least 12 full months and complete supervised driving time before licensing. Adults usually do not have that same waiting period after getting a permit. So while you are gathering documents, planning the vision screening, figuring out fees, or deciding whether to test online through Colorado @Home or in person, use this DMV practice test to keep the knowledge fresh. The handbook is important, yes. But practice is where the rules start feeling less like trivia and more like something you can actually use.