Delaware DMV Practice Test 3
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Delaware DMV practice test gives you an easy way to prepare for the real thing, with 20 questions that cover the material new drivers are actually expected to understand before they move from studying the rules to driving under them. You need 16 correct answers to pass, which sounds manageable until you hit one of those questions where two answers feel almost right. Practicing can help you get part these roadblocks.
The practice test focuses on the everyday stuff that becomes important very quickly on Delaware roads: traffic laws, safe driving habits, right-of-way judgment, signs, seat belt rules, and the state’s no-nonsense restriction on using a cell phone, texting device, or similar electronic device while driving on a Level One Learner’s Permit. Delaware treats those permit restrictions seriously, so it's good to know them before you try driving.
Use this Delaware DMV learners permit test practice more than once. That sounds obvious, maybe too obvious, but it is where the value is. The first run shows what you think you know. The next few show what you keep missing, which is the part that matters before the DMV test does the same thing with less patience.
Speaking of the DMV, it's good to know what to expect there. For teen drivers, the path starts with the Level One Learner’s Permit at age 16. Applicants under 18 need to complete a Delaware Department of Education-approved driver education course and bring the Delaware Driver Education Certificate (also known as the Blue/White Certificate). There is also the sponsor requirement, which is easy to forget but tends to hold up applications. For the first 6 months, the permit holder must drive with a qualified supervising driver in the front seat. After that, limited unsupervised driving is allowed from 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m., though passenger limits and overnight restrictions still apply. Adults have a more direct route, but direct does not mean casual. First-time Class D applicants age 18 or older need to pass the vision and knowledge exams, get a learner’s permit, practice with a licensed driver over 21 seated beside them, wait at least 10 days, and then take the road skills exam. Not the full GDL program, but still special rules to protect new drivers. It all starts with a permit, so let's get cracking on that.