Colorado Permit Test Practice 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Colorado practice permit test is a good place to start if you’re working toward a Class D instruction permit and trying to make sense of all the little pieces that come with getting licensed. Because, yes, there is the actual knowledge test, but there’s also the handbook, the documents, the vision screening, the parent signature if you’re under 18, and, somewhere in the middle of all that, you’re still supposed to remember what a yellow pennant sign means. This fourth Colorado practice permit test focuses on general driving knowledge, with a closer look at child safety seats and the way Colorado expects drivers to protect younger passengers. It gives you 20 multiple-choice questions, and you’ll need 16 correct answers to pass with an 80%. The real Colorado Class D knowledge test is 25 questions, with 20 correct answers required, so this version is a shorter, less dramatic rehearsal before the official thing. Not easier exactly, just less pressure.
The official test pulls from the Colorado Driver Handbook and covers the usual suspects: traffic laws, signs and signals, pavement markings, safe driving habits, sharing the road, impaired driving, crash prevention, and those Colorado-specific situations like mountain roads, winter driving, rural highways, freeways, and night driving. Road signs are mixed right into the main knowledge exam, along with lane controls and markings, so it makes sense to study them as part of the whole driving picture instead of treating them like flashcard decorations. You can use this Colorado permit test practice while you’re also getting the other licensing steps lined up. Teens may be dealing with driver education or a driver awareness program, forms and more forms, and planning for their 50 hours of supervised driving. Adults have their own checklist: written test, vision exam, fingerprints, photo, fees, identity documents, and proof of Colorado address. It is a lot, honestly. This practice test is the easiest part, so take it, miss what you miss, retake it, and get the rules into your head before Colorado asks you about them for real.