Florida Drivers Ed Practice Test 8
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Florida intersections are where polite driving goes to get tested. A four-way stop looks simple until three cars arrive at once, one driver waves like they’re directing traffic, and somebody else decides the word “yield” is more of a suggestion. That is exactly why this Florida permit practice test spends time on right-of-way rules, stop signs, left turns, pedestrians, and the little intersection decisions that can quietly wreck your confidence if you only sort of know them. This is the eighth test in our Florida DMV practice test series, with 20 multiple-choice questions focused on intersection management and safe decision-making. Not glamorous material, admittedly. But it is the stuff Florida expects you to understand before you start treating real traffic like a group project with strangers. You’ll see questions about who goes first, when you need to wait, how to handle four-way stops, and what to do when the “obvious” answer is not actually the legal one. That happens more than people like to admit. And yes, this connects directly to the real Class E Knowledge Exam. Florida’s knowledge test has 50 questions, and you need 40 correct answers to pass. That gives you room to miss 10, which sounds generous until the questions start stacking up and suddenly every sign, lane marking, and right-of-way scenario feels personally invested in your failure. If you do not pass, the knowledge retest fee is $10, so it is worth getting the dull-but-important pieces straight before test day. The practice test includes hints for when a question starts doing that thing where every answer seems almost right. Miss one, and you’ll get an explanation instead of just a cold little “incorrect,” which is useful because memorizing answers from an FLHSMV test cheat sheet is not the same as understanding why the rule works. Cheat sheets can make you feel prepared in the same way a screenshot of a map makes you feel like you know a city. Briefly. Then you have to actually turn somewhere. Teen drivers also have a longer runway in Florida. A learner’s license starts at 15, and before a restricted Class E license at 16, teens generally need to hold that learner’s license for 12 months or until age 18, complete 50 supervised driving hours, and get 10 of those at night. So, yes, there are layers. Take this Florida driver ed practice test more than once. The question mix changes, which keeps you from simply memorizing your way through it and calling that “studying.” Intersections are fussy. Better to meet their nonsense here first.