Delaware Road Signs Test 2
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Delaware road signs have a sneaky way of looking obvious right up until the DMV asks about them in test form, and the Delaware driver exam can go way beyond the signs everyone recognizes from the grocery-store parking lot. You may be asked to identify highway signs by shape, color, or symbol, and you’re also expected to understand traffic signals and pavement markings. So yes, the little details matter. The DMV did not put all those colors and shapes out there for decoration, unfortunately. This Delaware road signs test gives you 20 multiple-choice questions focused on the signs and signals you’re likely to see on the road and, more importantly for today’s purposes, in the licensing process. It covers the usual cast of characters: stop signs, yield signs, warning signs, regulatory signs, guide signs, no-parking areas, and those color cues that tell you what kind of message you’re dealing with before you’ve even read the words. Red tends to mean something is restricted or flat-out not allowed. Yellow is the road’s way of clearing its throat before something changes. Green points you along. Easy in theory. Less easy when the answer choices start sounding like they were written to test your confidence, not your eyesight. The official Delaware Class D Driver Manual includes road sign knowledge, and it is the study source you should actually trust. On the Class D knowledge test, Delaware gives 32 questions, and you need 26 correct answers to pass, which means you can miss no more than 6. Road sign questions count toward that score. That is the part people sometimes gloss over, and then they get a bit too casual, and then suddenly “I know signs” turns into “why did I miss that one?” Use this DMV road signs practice test before your Delaware permit test, during driver education, or while brushing up for a license renewal. It is not a sketchy cheat sheet dressed up as a shortcut. It is a practical way to see what you know, what you only sort of know, and what deserves another look before you walk into the DMV trying to look relaxed.