Delaware DMV Sign Test 3
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Road signs are one of those Delaware DMV topics people assume they already know, right up until the test asks about a sign by shape, color, or symbol and suddenly the answer starts looking a little less obvious. That is why this Delaware road signs test is worth taking seriously. Not dramatically seriously, no need to clear your weekend for it, but seriously enough to practice before you sit down for the real Class D knowledge exam. This Delaware DMV road sign test gives you 20 practice questions focused on the signs and signals Delaware drivers are expected to recognize quickly. Stop signs, yield signs, warning signs, direction signs, lane-use signs, pavement markings, traffic signals, the whole familiar-but-somehow-still-testable group. The official Delaware Class D knowledge test includes 32 questions, and you need 26 correct answers to pass, so road sign questions are not just decorative filler. Miss too many of the “easy” ones and, well, now they were not so easy. The point here is not to memorize a bunch of shapes in a panic. It is to get comfortable seeing a sign and knowing what it means without overthinking it. A triangle means yield. An octagon means stop. Rectangular signs often give rules, directions, or useful information, depending on the sign itself. And then, of course, Delaware can throw in highway signs, traffic signals, and pavement markings too, because the DMV does enjoy covering the full menu. You can take this Delaware road signs permit test online whenever it fits, which is helpful if your schedule is already doing that thing where every simple errand becomes three errands. After the test, the feedback shows what you got right, what you missed, and why the correct answers make sense. That last part matters more than people admit, because guessing correctly once does not help much when a similar sign shows up later with slightly different wording. For the real licensing process, Delaware applicants take the DMV-administered Class D knowledge exam in person at a DMV office, including locations in Wilmington, Delaware City/New Castle, Dover, and Georgetown. Applicants also need to pass a vision screening before a license is issued, with 20/40 vision required for full driving privileges, with or without corrective lenses. Audio testing is available on request, and Delaware offers driver manuals in multiple languages, though drivers still need to understand road signs in English. Use this Delaware DMV practice test as a focused, no-nonsense way to tighten up sign recognition before test day and before those signs matter on an actual road.