Hawaii Road Signs Test 4
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
A Hawaii road signs practice test is a focused way to study one of the most practical parts of the Class 3 written knowledge test. Road signs are not handled as a separate, neatly boxed-off exam in Hawaii; they are folded into the regular 30-question permit test, right alongside traffic laws, safe driving rules, signals, pavement markings, right-of-way, impaired driving laws, sharing the road, and the basic things every driver is expected to know before being handed a permit. So, yes, this is a road signs test, but it is really helping you prepare for the way sign questions appear on the actual Hawaii DMV practice test experience. This practice test includes 20 multiple-choice questions built around the signs, colors, shapes, and symbols Hawaii drivers need to recognize without making a whole dramatic production out of it. Red signs, yellow warnings, green guide signs, lane-use markings, signals, pavement markings, the odd sign shape that suddenly looks less familiar than it should — it is all fair game. And that matters, because road signs do not usually give you a long, generous moment to think things over. They show up on curves, near intersections, through busy Honolulu traffic, along coastal roads, and in those wet, winding spots where guessing is a poor little strategy. To pass this Hawaii signs test, you will need 16 correct answers out of 20. That 80% mark is intentional, since Hawaii’s official Class 3 knowledge test uses the same passing standard: 24 correct answers out of 30. The official exam is based on the Hawaii Driver’s Manual, so that manual should still be your anchor. This practice test is the extra work, the rehearsal, the place where you catch the small misunderstandings before they become very official misunderstandings. Use it if you are getting ready for a learner’s instructional permit, renewing your license, or just realizing that some signs have quietly slipped out of memory. Take it more than once. Not because repetition is exciting — it usually is not — but because sign recognition gets faster once your brain stops treating every symbol like a tiny roadside riddle. By the time you sit for the real written test, the goal is not to feel lucky. The goal is to recognize what you are looking at and move on with confidence.