Road signs practice test

Road Signs Practice Test with Pictures for DMV Permit Test

Take 24 DMV road-sign picture questions for permit-test practice, starting with regulatory traffic signs and yellow warning signs. Then use shape, color, flashcards, saved mistakes, and state-specific source checks to choose the next drill.

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Unofficial tool. TestDayTools is fan-made and unofficial. We are not affiliated with College Board, any state DMV, or any government agency.
Source contextFHWA MUTCD and your state driver handbook
PrivacyAnswers stay in this browser
Quality checkOriginal practice questions
UpdatedMay 13, 2026
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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.

Step 1Identify the sign

Use the image first, then read the choices.

Step 2Check shape and color

Connect the sign to the study guide below.

Step 3Save missed signs

Wrong answers stay in your browser for quick review.

Step 4Review the sign library

Retake the round after the meaning feels obvious.

Weak-area shortcuts

Practice road signs by weak area

Choose the sign category that feels slow, then the quiz opens with that focus selected.

Sign meaning finder

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.

23 signs shown

Regulatory traffic signs Stop

Come to a complete stop, yield, then proceed when safe.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs Yield

Slow and give the right of way when another road user has priority.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs Do Not Enter

Do not enter that roadway, ramp, or restricted direction.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs Wrong Way

You are facing traffic; correct your direction safely.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs One Way

Traffic moves only in the arrow direction.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs No U-turn

A U-turn is not allowed at that location.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs 4-Way Stop

Every approach stops; use arrival order and right-of-way rules before entering.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs No Right Turn

A right turn is not allowed from this approach.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs No Turn on Red

Stopping first is not enough; wait until the signal allows the turn.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs Keep Right

Stay to the right of an island, divider, or obstruction.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs Speed Limit

The posted number is the legal maximum under normal conditions.

Practice this group
Regulatory traffic signs Do Not Pass

Passing another vehicle is prohibited in this zone.

Practice this group
Warning signs Slippery When Wet

Road traction may be reduced; avoid sudden maneuvers.

Practice this group
Warning signs Railroad Crossing Ahead

Prepare for tracks and obey crossing controls.

Practice this group
Warning signs Roundabout

A circular intersection is ahead; slow and yield as required.

Practice this group
School, work-zone, and service signs School Crossing

Watch for children and obey school-zone rules.

Practice this group
School, work-zone, and service signs Pedestrian Crossing

Watch for people crossing and be ready to yield.

Practice this group
School, work-zone, and service signs Work Zone

Expect temporary traffic control, workers, or lane changes.

Practice this group
School, work-zone, and service signs Hospital

A hospital or medical service is nearby.

Practice this group
School, work-zone, and service signs Animal Crossing

Animals may enter the road; slow and scan shoulders.

Practice this group
DMV practice engine

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.

1. Answer 2. Read explanation 3. Review saved mistakes 4. Retake weak topics
Short road-sign round

DMV road signs permit-test starter

Start with 10 high-signal road-sign questions before taking the full 24-picture round. This is the fastest path for visitors who came from a broad DMV road signs query.

Question 1 of 10 0 answered 0 correct

Category: Regulatory signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

1. What should a driver do at this sign?

Category: Regulatory signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

2. This triangular sign means drivers should:

Category: Regulatory signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

3. What does this red and white sign tell a driver?

Category: Regulatory signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

4. If you see this sign after turning, what is the safest action?

Category: Turn and lane control signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

5. What movement is prohibited by this sign?

Category: Turn and lane control signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

6. This black and white arrow sign means:

Category: Speed signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

7. What does this sign set for the road segment?

Category: Regulatory signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

8. What does this pennant-style sign mean?

Category: Warning signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

9. What should this yellow sign make you expect?

Category: Warning signs

Look at the sign, then choose the safest meaning or driver action.

10. This sign warns that:

Study context

Use the universal signs first, then confirm state-specific rules

Most states use MUTCD-style sign categories, but exact handbook wording, permit-test format, and passing rules are state-specific.

Step 1Learn sign category

Decide whether the sign is regulatory, warning, guide/service, school, or work-zone.

Step 2Name the action

Convert the sign into what a safe driver should do next.

Step 3Pick your state

Use a state page below to practice the handbook context for your permit test.

Study by intent

What to review after this road signs test

The best next page depends on the mistakes you saved during the image quiz.

If you miss red signsReview regulatory traffic signs

Focus on stop, yield, do-not-enter, wrong-way, no-turn, one-way, speed, and no-passing rules.

Retake the first half of the quiz.
If you miss yellow signsReview warning signs

Focus on merge, lane ends, slippery road, railroad, roundabout, animal crossing, signal ahead, and pedestrian warnings.

Slow down and name the hazard.
If you miss state wordingMove into a state page

Choose your state practice page for exact exam context, pass mark, official manual link, and mixed permit questions.

Use the related state tools below.
Shape and color guide

How to read road signs before the words are clear

A practical road-sign study session starts with category recognition. Shape, color, and symbol usually tell you whether the sign states a rule, warns about a hazard, points to a service, or needs a focused flashcard review.

Regulatory Rules and required actions

Regulatory traffic signs tell drivers what they must do, must not do, or must yield to at that location.

  • Red and white signs often mean stop, yield, do not enter, wrong way, or a prohibited movement.
  • White rectangles with black text usually state rules such as speed limit, lane use, turn control, or parking limits.
  • On a permit test, translate the sign into an action: stop, yield, slow to the limit, stay one way, or do not turn.
Warning Conditions that need attention

Warning signs prepare drivers for curves, merges, lane endings, crossings, signals, animals, or road surfaces ahead.

  • Yellow diamond signs usually call for speed control and extra scanning.
  • Railroad, pedestrian, school, and animal signs often test whether you know when to slow and look ahead.
  • Orange signs are temporary traffic-control signs for work zones and maintenance areas.
Guide and service Information and destinations

Guide and service signs help drivers choose routes, exits, hospitals, fuel, lodging, rest areas, and local destinations.

  • Blue signs often point to driver services such as hospitals, fuel, food, or lodging.
  • Green signs commonly guide drivers to streets, exits, and destinations.
  • Brown signs are often used for parks, recreation, or cultural points of interest.
Road sign library

Common road signs to recognize before permit-test day

Use this library after the quiz. Review the signs you missed, then retake the practice round until the meaning and driver action feel automatic.

Regulatory traffic signs

These signs state laws, restrictions, right-of-way rules, or required directions.

Stop

Come to a complete stop, yield, then proceed when safe.

Yield

Slow and give the right of way when another road user has priority.

Do Not Enter

Do not enter that roadway, ramp, or restricted direction.

Wrong Way

You are facing traffic; correct your direction safely.

One Way

Traffic moves only in the arrow direction.

No U-turn

A U-turn is not allowed at that location.

4-Way Stop

Every approach stops; use arrival order and right-of-way rules before entering.

No Right Turn

A right turn is not allowed from this approach.

No Turn on Red

Stopping first is not enough; wait until the signal allows the turn.

Keep Right

Stay to the right of an island, divider, or obstruction.

Speed Limit

The posted number is the legal maximum under normal conditions.

Do Not Pass

Passing another vehicle is prohibited in this zone.

Warning signs

These signs warn about conditions that may require lower speed, more space, or extra scanning.

Merge

Traffic may join your lane; adjust speed and space.

Lane Ends

A lane will end and traffic must merge.

Slippery When Wet

Road traction may be reduced; avoid sudden maneuvers.

Signal Ahead

Prepare for a traffic light ahead.

Railroad Crossing Ahead

Prepare for tracks and obey crossing controls.

Roundabout

A circular intersection is ahead; slow and yield as required.

School, work-zone, and service signs

These signs flag special areas where driver attention, lower speed, or route information matters.

School Crossing

Watch for children and obey school-zone rules.

Pedestrian Crossing

Watch for people crossing and be ready to yield.

Work Zone

Expect temporary traffic control, workers, or lane changes.

Hospital

A hospital or medical service is nearby.

Animal Crossing

Animals may enter the road; slow and scan shoulders.

Quick facts

Practice size
24 image questions
Best for
DMV permit-test regulatory, warning, school, guide, and work-zone signs
Official source
FHWA MUTCD and your state driver handbook
Privacy
No signup; saved mistakes stay in your browser

Fast answer: what this road signs practice gives you

This is a 24-picture DMV road signs permit-test practice round. Start with the images, get instant explanations, then move missed signs into regulatory practice, flashcards, shape and color lookup, or a state road-sign page when local context matters.

What counts as a regulatory traffic sign?

A regulatory traffic sign tells drivers about a law, restriction, required direction, or right-of-way rule. Stop, yield, speed limit, one way, do not enter, wrong way, no U-turn, and no passing signs are common permit-test examples.

How this road signs practice test is different from a sign list

A plain sign list helps recognition, but permit tests often ask for the safest driver action. This page pairs each image with a decision, saves missed signs locally, and links into state-specific permit practice when you need exact handbook context.

Studying Florida road signs?

If you are preparing for Florida, use this page as a broad sign warm-up, then move into the Florida regulatory traffic signs page for Do Not Enter, Wrong Way, One Way, speed, no-passing, school, pedestrian, and FDOT/FLHSMV source links.

Practice by what you remember

If you remember a red slash, start with prohibited-movement signs. If you remember a yellow diamond, review warning signs. If you remember only a shape or color, use the shapes and colors finder before retaking the image quiz.

Road-sign practice paths from common searches

Use the path that matches what you were trying to solve: broad road-sign practice, flashcard review, shape lookup, or Florida regulatory signs.

Road signs practice

Start with the image quiz

Use this page when the query is broad. Answer pictures first, then let missed categories decide whether you need regulatory signs, warning signs, shape/color lookup, or flashcards.

Start image quiz
Road signs flashcards

Use cards when recognition is slow

Flashcards are better before the quiz when you cannot name the sign family quickly. After a card pass, return here for driver-action practice.

Open flashcards
Shape and color

Use lookup when only the visual clue stuck

Search yellow diamond, red and white, black and white, brown sign, octagon, pennant, or rectangle, then open the matching drill.

Open finder
Florida signs

Move to Florida regulatory signs when state context matters

Use the Florida page for regulatory traffic signs, official Florida source links, right-turn signs, yellow warning signs, and learner trouble spots.

Florida signs

FAQ

What is the difference between regulatory and warning road signs?

Regulatory signs state rules or restrictions, such as stop, yield, speed limit, one way, no U-turn, or do not enter. Warning signs alert you to conditions ahead, such as merging traffic, pedestrians, curves, signals, or slippery roads.

Do all U.S. permit tests include road signs?

Most permit-test study programs include road signs, but the format and number of sign questions vary by state. Use this page for core sign recognition, then review your state driver handbook for exact rules.

Is this a DMV road signs permit-test practice page?

Yes. It is built as a free practice round for common DMV road-sign recognition, but it is not an official state test. Use it to practice sign meaning and driver action, then confirm exact wording in your state driver handbook.

Are these official DMV road sign questions?

No. The questions are original practice prompts for study. TestDayTools is independent and is not affiliated with any DMV, MVC, DPS, FHWA, or testing agency.

Where should I practice Florida regulatory traffic signs?

Start with the Florida regulatory traffic signs page if you are studying for Florida. It keeps the same image-practice format but adds Florida-specific sign trouble spots, FDOT regulatory sign context, and FLHSMV source links.

Should I study road sign flashcards before this practice test?

Use flashcards first if you cannot name the sign family quickly. Use this practice test after that so you can choose the safest driver action from answer choices.

What should I do if I only remember a sign's shape or color?

Use the road sign shapes and colors finder, then come back to this image quiz. Shape and color recognition helps separate regulatory signs, warning signs, guide signs, and service signs before you read answer choices.

Sources