Connecticut Permit Test Simulator
80% Passing score
25 Questions
5 Mistakes allowed
The Connecticut permit test is not something you want to stroll into half-ready, mostly because the DMV has a way of making simple driving ideas feel oddly official once they land on the screen. The real knowledge test has 25 questions, and you need 20 correct answers to pass. That is an 80% score, which sounds manageable, and it is, but only if you are used to the way Connecticut asks about road signs, traffic laws, safe driving habits, intersections, and all those little judgment calls that come up behind the wheel. This CT permit practice test gives you that rehearsal without the DMV pressure sitting on your shoulders. Each round pulls 25 random questions, so the test does not go stale after one try. You get a mix of multiple-choice and true/false questions, much like the official Connecticut learner’s permit test, and the topics stay close to what you are expected to know from the driver’s manual. Road signs are included too, because Connecticut does not treat them as a separate road-sign-only test for a standard Class D permit. They are folded right into the main exam, where they belong, next to rules of the road and safe driving decisions. A couple of details are worth knowing before test day, because they can trip people up in the boring administrative way. Connecticut requires learner’s permit applicants to complete the free online Work Zone Safety Course before taking the knowledge test, and you need to bring the printed completion certificate with you. The DMV test is taken in person by appointment, and you have to pass the vision test before moving on to the knowledge test. Fail the knowledge test, and you are waiting 7 days, rescheduling, and paying the testing fee again. Not the end of the world, obviously, but annoying enough to avoid. Use this practice permit test more than once. Read the questions carefully, especially the ones that seem too easy, because those are sometimes where the wording gets sneaky. The point is not just to memorize answers. It is to get comfortable with Connecticut’s test format, build steady confidence, and walk into the DMV already knowing what kind of thinking the exam expects from you.