Idaho DMV Practice Test 2
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Idaho’s DMV written test is not something to wander into on a loose “I basically know how roads work” kind of confidence. The official Class D knowledge test pulls from the Idaho Driver’s Handbook, and it covers more than stop signs and who goes first at a four-way stop. You’ll see traffic laws, road signs, signals, pavement markings, safe driving practices, impaired driving rules, sharing-the-road situations, and the general responsibilities that come with being the person behind the wheel. The real Idaho Class D knowledge test has 40 questions. You need 34 correct answers to pass, which means an 85% score. That leaves room to miss 6, and not a generous 6 either, because a few careless mistakes can eat through that cushion pretty fast. If you fail, Idaho requires a 3-day wait before you can retest, and the testing fee has to be paid again. So, small detour here, but an important one: practice is cheaper than guessing. This free Idaho DMV practice test gives you 20 multiple-choice questions focused on the kind of material that actually deserves your attention, including Idaho road rules, safety habits, and details like proper seat belt use. It is untimed, which sounds like a minor feature until you are trying to figure out why two answer choices both seem almost right. Take the extra minute. Read the wording. Let the question be irritating for a second if it needs to be. It is also a useful fit for more than one type of driver. New drivers can use it while working through Idaho driver training and Graduated Driver Licensing requirements. Adults 17 and older preparing for a Class D instruction permit can use it to tighten up their handbook knowledge before testing. Out-of-state transfer applicants may need the knowledge test too, and anyone whose Idaho license has been expired for 25 months or more should expect the written test to come back into the picture. Use this Idaho DMV permit practice test with the Idaho Driver’s Handbook, not instead of it. That distinction matters, unfortunately. The practice test helps you catch weak spots, get used to the wording, and build enough test-day steadiness that the real DMV written test feels less like a surprise inspection and more like something you already had a decent look at beforehand.