Georgia Learners Permit Practice Test 6
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Georgia gives you a pretty clear licensing ladder, which is helpful, because nobody wants to discover the “one year and one day” rule after they have already mentally picked out a road test date. This GA permit practice test helps you start at the right end of that ladder: the Class CP Learner’s Permit, available at age 15 after you pass the DDS knowledge exam and vision exam. The permit test itself is not just trivia about signs and signals. It is the state’s first check that you understand how Georgia expects new drivers to behave before they are turned loose with a little more freedom. This Georgia practice permit test has 20 questions, and you need at least 16 correct answers to pass. The questions follow the feel of the real Georgia DDS written test, with multiple-choice and true-or-false formats covering road rules, safe driving habits, signs, and turn signal use. Yes, turn signals. The humble blinking light that somehow becomes optional in too many parking lots, lane changes, stadium exits, and “I swear I had room” merges. On the test, it is a rule. On the road, it is basically your only polite way of saying, “Heads up, I’m about to do something.” Once you earn a Class CP permit, Georgia does not hand you the keys and wish you luck with traffic on I-75. You may drive only with a supervising driver who is at least 21, licensed to drive a Class C vehicle, fit and capable of taking control, and seated beside you. The permit can be valid for up to 2 years, but to move on to a Class D Provisional License, you must hold it for at least 1 year and 1 day. That tiny extra day is real, by the way, not decorative. For teens, the next step comes with more rules. A Class D license is available at age 16, but 16- and 17-year-olds must complete Joshua’s Law requirements, including approved driver education and supervised driving. Teens under 18 also need ADAP, the Drug and Alcohol Awareness Program. And after all that, Class D drivers still have restrictions: no driving from midnight to 5 a.m., plus passenger limits that loosen over time. Use this Georgia DDS practice test as often as you need. It is not a shortcut, which is good, because shortcuts tend to be where people miss the boring-but-important stuff. It is a practical way to learn the test format, clean up weak spots, and walk into the DDS with fewer surprises.