Illinois Drivers Ed Practice Test 8
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
Illinois right-of-way questions are where a lot of new drivers get humbled, usually because everyone thinks they know how a four-way stop works until there are actual cars involved. This Illinois driver's ed practice test leans into those messy little moments: intersections, turns, lane choices, traffic signals, stop signs, and the quiet chaos of figuring out who gets to go first without starting a neighborhood incident. You’ll get 20 multiple-choice questions pulled from a larger pool, which is helpful because the real Illinois permit test is not interested in rewarding pure memorization. It is based on the Secretary of State’s Rules of the Road and covers the usual suspects: traffic laws, road signs, pavement markings, safe driving habits, right-of-way rules, DUI and distracted-driving laws, and how to share the road with pedestrians, bicyclists, motorcycles, emergency vehicles, and big trucks that need more room than your brain wants to give them at first. Officially, the Class D written test has at least 35 questions, and you need 80% to pass. In normal-person math, that means 28 right on a 35-question test. This Illinois permit practice test is not timed, which is good, because rushing through right-of-way questions is how people confidently pick the second-best answer. Take the extra second. Read the sign. Notice the lane marking. Think about the pedestrian who is absolutely going to matter in the question even if they feel like background decoration. Road sign questions are part of the regular written test too, not some separate little side quest, so sign shapes, colors, school zones, railroad crossings, work zones, traffic signals, and pavement markings all deserve attention. And then, because Illinois likes a process, there is the licensing side. Teen applicants generally need to be at least 15, have parent or guardian consent, meet driver education requirements, pass vision screening, and pass the written exam. Adults 18 and older can apply for an instruction permit, while some may need a 6-hour Adult Driver Education Course before getting licensed. Bring the right documents, expect the required fees, and plan on handling testing through a Secretary of State Driver Services facility. The test is only one piece of the whole thing, sure, but it is the piece that tells you whether the rules are actually sticking.