Illinois DMV Practice Test 4

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Illinois puts plenty of weight on everyday safety rules, and child passenger protection is one of those areas where the details actually matter. This Illinois rules of the road practice test leans into that practical side of driving, with a clear focus on child safety seats, passenger protection, and the kind of rule-based judgment that shows up on the Illinois DMV permit test. The questions come from the official Illinois driver’s manual, so the material is not random trivia dressed up as test prep. It is the stuff Illinois expects drivers to know. This Illinois permit practice test gives you 20 multiple-choice questions and asks for 16 correct answers to pass. The real Class D written knowledge test is longer, with at least 35 questions, and the passing score is 80%. On a 35-question exam, that means 28 right, 7 wrong at most. Road signs are mixed into the written knowledge test, too, not handled as some separate little road-sign ritual for standard applicants. That catches people more often than it should, mostly because signs feel familiar until the wording gets annoyingly specific. Unlimited retakes make this DMV practice test useful in a way the real testing window is not. Illinois gives applicants 3 attempts within 1 year from the first attempt, which is generous enough, sure, but not something you want to burn through because you skimmed child restraint rules or guessed your way through right-of-way questions. Here, a missed answer is just feedback. A little irritating, maybe, but useful feedback. For teen drivers, the test is only the front door. Illinois allows an instruction permit at 15, an initial license at 16, and full licensing at 18. Before that initial license, teens must hold the permit for 9 months, complete 50 supervised driving hours with 10 at night, and finish driver education, including at least 6 hours behind the wheel with a certified instructor. A parent or legal guardian has to certify those practice hours, and applicants under 18 also have to satisfy school attendance requirements. Adult applicants have their own fine print. First-time drivers ages 18-20 who have not completed approved driver education need a 6-hour adult course. Everyone still has to meet vision standards, bring the correct documents, and pay the license fee for their age group. So, yes, this Illinois DMV knowledge test is test prep. It is also a cleaner way to understand the process before the state is the one grading you.
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