Use the image first, then read the choices.
New York road signs
New York DMV Road Signs Practice Test with Pictures
Practice New York DMV road signs with original picture prompts, instant explanations, and a category guide for signs and signals, regulatory signs, warning signs, crossings, work zones, and service signs.
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Road sign lab built for visual practice
Road-sign pages should feel like a small image tool, not a plain article. Start the quiz, review misses, then use the sign guide without leaving the page.
Connect the sign to the study guide below.
Wrong answers stay in your browser for quick review.
Retake the round after the meaning feels obvious.
Before test day
New York DMV test-day path
Use this practice page, then finish with what to bring, official documents, road signs, mistakes, and visit logistics in one saved checklist.
New York sign practice
New York road signs with the pass rule in mind
Start with the image quiz, then review the sign library by category before retaking the road-sign round.
The New York learner permit test is a 20-question multiple-choice test.
You need at least 14 correct overall and at least 2 of the 4 road-sign questions.
This site's mock mode doubles the official length for extra review.
Answers stay in your browser and are not saved to a profile.
- 1Read rules first
Start with signs, right of way, signals, safe driving, and alcohol/drug rules.
- 2Run quick practice
Use the 15-question round to find categories you need to reread.
- 3Drill road signs
Because road signs have a separate pass requirement, do the image mode slowly.
- 4Take mock exam
Use the 40-question mixed mode to check stamina and weak areas before test day.
Practice New York road signs by weak area
Choose the sign category that feels slow, then the quiz opens with that focus selected.
Practice stop, yield, no entry, speed, direction, and turn restrictions first.
Warning signs Hazards and road changesUse this when yellow warning signs, crossings, curves, or road-condition signs feel slow.
Speed signs Speed limits and safe speedPractice posted limits and the decision to slow down when conditions change.
Turns and direction Turns, lanes, and directionReview signs that control turns, lanes, movement, and one-way traffic.
Search road sign meanings before you quiz
Type a sign name, action, color, or hazard to find the meaning quickly, then jump into the matching practice group.
Come to a complete stop before the line, crosswalk, or intersection.
Practice this groupSlow and let traffic or pedestrians with the right of way go first.
Practice this groupYou are entering traffic from the wrong direction; turn around safely.
Practice this groupWatch for people crossing and be ready to stop.
Practice this groupA lane is ending ahead; merge early and avoid sudden moves.
Practice this groupReduce speed and avoid hard braking or sharp steering.
Practice this groupLook for children and obey school-zone speed or stop rules.
Practice this groupNever stop on tracks; obey gates, lights, and crossbucks.
Practice this groupExpect workers, cones, flaggers, lane shifts, and slower traffic.
Practice this groupYield before entering and follow the circular traffic flow.
Practice this groupScan the roadside and slow when animals may enter the road.
Practice this groupA hospital or emergency medical facility is nearby.
Practice this groupNo matching sign yet. Try a simpler word such as stop, merge, speed, school, or work.
Choose a practice mode
Start with a short diagnostic, switch to image-based signs, or run a longer mock exam when you want a realistic score check. Missed questions are saved on this device so the next step is obvious.
- NY starterStart with 8 New York sign-and-signal questions before the full picture round. Use this when you want a quick permit-test check.
- Full NY signsPractice warning, regulatory, yield, crossing, and service signs with original images.
New York signs and signals starter
Start with 8 New York sign-and-signal questions before the full picture round. Use this when you want a quick permit-test check.
1. What does this sign mean?
2. What should a driver do at this sign?
3. This sign tells drivers that:
4. What is the safest meaning of this sign?
5. What action is prohibited by this sign?
6. This sign indicates:
7. What does this sign set?
8. What should you expect near this sign?
New York road signs in the real permit-test context
Road-sign practice works better when you also know how signs fit into the real test and official study source.
New York describes the learner permit test as a 20-question multiple-choice test.
You need at least 14 correct overall and at least 2 of the 4 road-sign questions.
New York offers an online permit test for eligible applicants and DMV office testing.
The longer mock mode gives extra review beyond the official length.
New York signs by shape, color, and markings
Search-result competitors usually teach sign patterns, not only quiz answers. Use these patterns before retaking the image round.
Shape often tells you the urgency before you read the words.
- Octagon: stop completely.
- Triangle: yield and give right of way.
- Diamond: warning or changing road condition.
- Pentagon: school zone or school crossing.
Color helps separate a rule, a warning, or a service sign quickly.
- Red: stop, yield, do not enter, or prohibited action.
- Yellow: general warning or caution.
- Orange: work zone or temporary traffic control.
- Blue/green: services, routes, or guide information.
Permit questions often mix signs with lane markings and traffic signals.
- Solid yellow on your side usually means no passing.
- Flashing red works like a stop sign.
- Flashing yellow means proceed carefully.
- Crosswalk markings require pedestrian awareness.
Road signs to recognize before test day
Use this as a mini sign manual before or after the image quiz. The drawings are original study illustrations, not copied official test images.
These signs tell you what you must do or what is prohibited.
Come to a complete stop before the line, crosswalk, or intersection.
Slow and let traffic or pedestrians with the right of way go first.
Do not drive into that road, ramp, or lane.
You are entering traffic from the wrong direction; turn around safely.
Traffic flows only in the arrow direction.
Do not turn around at this location.
Yellow warning signs give advance notice so you can slow or change position before the hazard.
Watch for people crossing and be ready to stop.
Traffic streams join; adjust speed and spacing.
A lane is ending ahead; merge early and avoid sudden moves.
Reduce speed and avoid hard braking or sharp steering.
A traffic signal is ahead; prepare to stop.
A divided roadway begins or changes ahead.
These signs often require extra scanning because children, workers, tracks, or temporary lane changes may be nearby.
Look for children and obey school-zone speed or stop rules.
Never stop on tracks; obey gates, lights, and crossbucks.
Expect workers, cones, flaggers, lane shifts, and slower traffic.
Yield before entering and follow the circular traffic flow.
Scan the roadside and slow when animals may enter the road.
A hospital or emergency medical facility is nearby.
Quick facts
- Question count
- 20 image-based road sign questions
- Image source
- Original SVG illustrations
- Best use
- NY permit-test sign and signal review
- Official source
- New York DMV driver manual
- Privacy
- Answers stay in your browser
New York road signs quick guide
| Sign type | What it usually means | Driving response |
|---|---|---|
| Regulatory sign | A traffic law or required action. | Follow the posted instruction, such as stop, yield, one way, speed, or a prohibited turn. |
| Warning sign | A hazard or condition ahead. | Slow down and prepare early. |
| Signs and signals | Traffic lights, railroad controls, lane signs, and crossing signs. | Name the required driver action before choosing an answer. |
| Yield sign | Give right of way before entering. | Slow or stop if needed before proceeding. |
| School sign | Children may be nearby. | Reduce speed and watch crosswalks. |
| Railroad signal | Train crossing control. | Stop when lights or gates require it and never go around gates. |
| Work zone sign | Temporary road work or lane changes. | Expect workers, equipment, and changed traffic patterns. |
What your missed sign questions mean
| Missed pattern | Likely weak area | Review next |
|---|---|---|
| Mostly warning signs | Color and shape recognition. | Yellow diamond signs and hazard response. |
| Mostly regulatory signs | Law vs. warning distinction. | White rectangular signs and posted restrictions. |
| Crossing questions | Railroad, school, and pedestrian safety. | Where to stop and when to wait. |
| Yield/right-of-way signs | Decision timing at intersections. | Yield rules and safe gap judgment. |
Fast answer: New York DMV road signs practice
Use this page for New York DMV road signs practice when you need image questions, not a long handbook chapter. Start with the 20-question sign round, then use the quick guide to separate regulatory signs, warning signs, signs and signals, school crossings, railroad controls, and work-zone cues.
Why signs are a useful quick win
Road sign questions are concrete and searchable. If you can quickly connect a shape or color with the right action, you remove one source of permit-test uncertainty.
Study the action, not only the image
A sign matters because it tells you what to do: stop, yield, slow, watch, merge, or avoid a movement. Practice should always connect the sign to the action.
Use the New York DMV manual as the source check
This practice page uses original illustrations and explanations. For exact New York wording, permit rules, and official study material, use the New York DMV driver manual and practice-test page linked below.
New York road-sign study path
Use this route when Search Console shows New York sign interest but the click path still needs to be clearer.
Take the New York picture round
Use the image quiz first so you can see whether the weak spot is regulatory signs, yellow warnings, crossings, or signals.
Start NY sign quizReview rules and required actions
If you miss stop, yield, one-way, speed, no-turn, or entry-control signs, use the regulatory-sign drill before a full mixed test.
Regulatory drillMove from signs into mixed practice
After signs feel faster, use the New York permit practice page for broader rules, right-of-way, safety, and official-source review.
NY permit practiceNew York road sign mistakes
Ignoring sign shape
Shape can help you identify a sign even before you can read every word.
Treating yield like merge-at-any-speed
A yield sign may require slowing or stopping until the way is clear.
Driving around gates
Never go around lowered gates or stop on the tracks.
Checklist
FAQ
What New York road signs should I study first?
Start with regulatory signs, warning signs, school and pedestrian crossings, railroad controls, work-zone signs, and common service signs. The fastest practice is to connect each sign to the action a driver should take.
Are these official New York DMV sign questions?
No. They are original practice questions written for study support.
Should I memorize every sign image?
You should understand common colors, shapes, and actions, then verify details in the official manual.
Does this quiz cover the whole permit test?
No. It only focuses on signs and signals. Use the full New York DMV permit practice page and the official manual for broader review.