Florida DMV Practice Test 2
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Studying for the Florida FLHSMV permit test is not exactly anyone’s idea of a thrilling afternoon, but it does beat walking into the exam and realizing the handbook had more fine print than you gave it credit for. The Florida Class E Knowledge Exam is the written test used for a learner’s license, and for teen drivers, it comes wrapped inside the larger Florida licensing process. If you are under 18, you need to be at least 15, complete the required driver education course, pass vision and hearing screenings, bring the right identity and residency documents, and pass the knowledge exam. So, yes, the test is only one piece of the process. It is just the piece that tends to stare back at you from a screen with 20 questions and no sympathy. That is where this Florida permit practice test earns its keep. It gives you 20 questions built around the stuff Florida expects new drivers to know before they start acting like turn signals are optional. You will see questions on seat belt rules, traffic signs, right-of-way, basic road safety, impaired driving, and the kinds of everyday driving decisions that seem obvious until the wording gets weird. And the wording does get weird sometimes. That is part of the charm, if we are being generous. For applicants under 18, Florida allows the Class E Knowledge Exam to be taken online through approved third-party administrators, but there is paperwork involved because of course there is. A parent or guardian proctoring form is required, and it has to be notarized or signed in front of a driver license examiner. Adults 18 and older have their own route. First-time adult drivers who have never held a license must complete the 4-hour Traffic Law and Substance Abuse Education course, usually called TLSAE, then pass the vision test, the Class E Knowledge Exam, and the driving skills exam. They do not have to get a learner’s license first. New Florida residents with a valid out-of-state license usually only need the vision and hearing tests. Use this Florida DMV permit practice test with the Florida Driver’s Handbook, a drivers ed course, road sign review, or whatever study method keeps your brain from quietly leaving the room. Take it more than once. Miss a few questions. Fix the gaps. That is the whole point: not magic, not a shortcut, just a practical way to make the real DMV written test feel less like an ambush.