Delaware Driving Test Practice 5
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
The Delaware driver's license test is not something to wander into with a vague memory of road signs and a lucky pencil. Delaware expects you to know the rules, especially the ones that turn serious fast, like DUI laws, blood alcohol limits, and what impaired driving can actually cost you. This Delaware DMV practice test, the fifth in the series, gives you 20 focused questions built around that kind of material, not random trivia dressed up as driver prep. It is still a practice test, of course. Nobody is pretending it is thrilling. But a good Delaware practice permit test does more than tell you whether you clicked the right answer. It gets you used to the shape of the exam, the wording of the questions, and the little details that tend to slip out of your head the moment you sit down for the real thing. Some questions include visual aids too, which matters more than people admit. Signs, road conditions, and safe-driving situations are often easier to understand when you are not trying to imagine them from a flat sentence. This free Delaware driving permit practice test is available online whenever you want to review, repeat, and tighten up your knowledge before test day. Use it early, use it again later, and let the actual DMV visit be the part with fewer surprises. Plan to get ready for the DMV side of this, because Delaware licensing is not just “study, pass, drive away.” Applicants need the right documents before they apply in person at a DMV office. Bring proof of identity and legal presence, Social Security documentation if eligible, and two proofs of Delaware residency from separate sources. Those residency documents need to show a physical Delaware address, not a P.O. box. If your current name does not match your identity document, name-change paperwork comes into the picture. Applicants under 18 have another layer: paperwork showing a parent or legal guardian connection. After passing the Class D knowledge exam, Delaware requires a wait of at least 10 days before the road skills exam. Road tests also come with their own checklist: a valid learner’s permit, a properly licensed accompanying driver who is at least 21, current registration, insurance, and a safe test vehicle. Forgetting one piece can turn an appointment into a wasted trip, and no one needs that.