Georgia DDS Permit Practice Test 9
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Georgia school bus rules deserve more attention than most new drivers give them, mostly because they are not just “stop when the bus stops” and call it a day. That would be convenient. The DDS expects you to understand the details: flashing lights, divided highways, traffic moving in both directions, children loading or unloading, and those moments when the correct move is to wait even though another driver is acting like patience was recently outlawed. This Georgia DMV practice permit test gives you 20 focused questions on school bus safety and related road-rule judgment, using the same general style you will see on the real Georgia DDS permit test. Multiple choice and true-or-false questions may sound harmless, but the answer choices can get particular. That is the point. A good GA DDS practice test should make you slow down, notice the wording, and get used to eliminating the almost-right answers before the official test does it for you. The full Georgia permit knowledge exam is administered by the Department of Driver Services and is based on the Georgia Drivers Manual. First-time applicants must pass two separate sections: a 20-question Road Rules Test and a 20-question Road Signs Test. You need at least 15 correct answers on each section, which means school bus rules, traffic laws, signals, signs, pavement markings, and general driver responsibility all matter. Not equally every minute, no, but enough that skipping one category is a bad little strategy. And the school bus topic is not some isolated exam trick. In Atlanta or Savannah traffic, you may have multiple lanes, impatient drivers, and a stopped bus creating a situation that feels messier than the handbook paragraph made it sound. On rural roads, the danger shifts: less traffic, maybe, but also curves, lower visibility, and fewer cues that a bus is about to stop. Same law, different kind of pressure. So, yes, this GA DDS practice test helps you prepare for school bus questions. But more than that, it gives you a cleaner read on the kind of driver Georgia expects you to become: alert, patient when it matters, and not easily bullied by bad guesses or honking strangers. This also fits into the bigger licensing picture for teens. For a Georgia Class CP Learner’s Permit, you must be at least 15, and the permit may be valid for up to 2 years. Once permitted, you drive only with a qualified supervising driver who is at least 21, licensed for a Class C vehicle, able to take control, and seated beside you. A Class D Provisional License comes later, at age 16 or older, after holding the permit for at least 1 year and 1 day. New drivers over 18 have their own process. But no matter where you are in it, getting ready for the road starts with knowing the rules, and that's where this test comes in.