Illinois DMV Practice Test 5

5 out of 5 (30 votes)
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
This Illinois rules of the road practice test gets into one of the areas people tend to skim and then regret skimming: alcohol, DUI rules, BAC limits, and what impaired driving actually means under Illinois law. It is the fifth test in our Illinois permit practice test series, with 20 multiple-choice questions written to help you prepare for the Illinois DMV permit test without pretending the whole thing is just common sense. Some of it is common sense. Some of it is very specific, and that is usually where people lose points. The Illinois Class D written exam is based on the Secretary of State’s Rules of the Road, and it is not limited to one neat little category. You are expected to understand traffic laws, road signs, traffic signals, pavement markings, right-of-way rules, speed laws, turns, passing, parking, lane use, distracted driving, DUI laws, and how to share the road with pedestrians, bicyclists, motorcyclists, large vehicles, and emergency vehicles. So while this Illinois free DMV practice test focuses heavily on alcohol-related driving rules, it still fits into the bigger picture of what the real DMV learners permit practice test is trying to measure. Illinois requires the Class D written test to include at least 35 questions, and you need a score of 80% to pass. On a 35-question exam, that works out to 28 correct answers, which means you can miss 7. That sounds forgiving until you realize how quickly those missed questions can pile up when signs, right-of-way, BAC rules, and penalties all start blending together in your head. And, just to add a little pressure, applicants get 3 attempts to pass the written and/or road tests within 1 year of the first attempt. This Illinois DMV knowledge test practice does not use actual state exam questions, because those are not released. Instead, the questions are written to match the subjects, wording style, and general feel of the real Illinois DMV permit test. You will also get immediate feedback after each answer, which is where the learning actually happens, not in that heroic last-minute handbook skim everyone swears will be enough. For teens, the permit process can begin at age 15 with parent or guardian consent, approved driver education requirements, identification documents, a vision screening, and the written exam. Adults have their own rules too, including possible instruction permits and, for some first-time applicants ages 18 to 20, a required 6-hour Adult Driver Education Course. So whatever your age, study the handbook, review road signs, and use this practice test until the rules feel less like trivia and more like things you can actually apply.
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