Start with Vehicle Equipment
This is one of the main areas in this test pool, so review the rule before another scored attempt.
All your missed questions are saved
automatically for extra practice.
It's a practice test that's automatically made up of all your missed questions. Once you finish this test, you’ll be able to revisit your Challenge Bank™ to practice and sharpen your skills.
View All PlansAdding difficult questions to Challenge Bank™ is an exclusive Premium feature. Unlock access to 650+ exam-like questions, a Pass Guarantee, personalized study plans, and more.
View All Plans| 90-100 | => | 13% |
| 80-89 | => | 25% |
| 70-79 | => | 30% |
| 60-69 | => | 19% |
| <60% | => | 12% |
In Florida, if you’re under 18, you must obtain a learner’s license (commonly called a learner’s permit) to practice driving under supervision before applying for a license. The requirements include being at least 15 years old, completing a state-approved driver education course (replacing the old TLSAE course as of 2025), passing a vision and hearing screening, and passing the written knowledge test.
The official Florida Class E Knowledge Exam has 50 multiple-choice questions covering Florida traffic laws, safe driving practices, and traffic controls. To pass, you must answer at least 40 correct (80%). All questions are based on the official driver’s manual (Florida DMV Handbook (FL Driver’s Manual) 2026).
This is our second Florida Permit Practice Test, current for June 2026 and based on the official Florida driver’s manual. All practice questions are multiple choice. Choose the best or most complete answer for each question.
If you get stuck, our AI Assistant can give you a hint or explain the question further. We also offer a Florida Permit Test Study Guide covering what documents to bring, fees, frequently missed questions, and how to prepare mentally and physically.

Daily email practice
Not ready for a full test right now? Use a 2-minute daily habit to keep permit rules fresh and spot exam-like patterns before test day.
Use this second set to check vehicle equipment plus adverse conditions after the first permit practice test
This page is online practice, not the official DMV exam. Use it to check vehicle equipment plus adverse conditions, then confirm the current FL testing option before relying on an at-home exam.
Based on the categories assigned to this second practice test pool.
Treat this as a second read, not a repeat of the first practice test.
This is one of the main areas in this test pool, so review the rule before another scored attempt.
Test 2 changes the question mix so you can separate understanding from memorized answers.
Use Test 3 to confirm that vehicle equipment plus adverse conditions no longer pull your score down.
M.S. (MIT, Columbia), Chief Educational Researcher. ACES member (Society for Editing). Verifies all 50 state tests against official handbooks weekly.
Verified student reviews • Shared with permission




Driver’s Ed is - nobody wants to set foot inside the DMV. That’s why millions of learners trust us for simple, visual, effective prep.
We are an officially recognized FMCSA Entry-Level Driver Training provider and a proud partner to over 2,500 libraries. We work with safety organizations like GHSA and the National Safety Council to help create safer roads for everyone.
Our trademarked system automatically saves questions you miss, creating personalized tests that target your weak spots until you’ve mastered the material.
Get smarter as you study. Our new AI-powered feedback provides detailed, question-level insights to help you understand the why behind each answer.
Go beyond the boring black-and-white manual. Our interactive handbook lets you read, listen with an MP3 audio version, or even chat with it to find the information you need, faster.
We build our practice questions from the current 2026 FL Driver Handbook and refine them using patterns recent test‑takers report.
Driver handbook • Knowledge‑test/permit overview • Fees & ID requirements • Office/appointment info
We mirror recurring themes (e.g., right‑of‑way traps, sign look‑alikes) and use similar distractors and wording styles.
We don’t collect or publish actual test items and we’re not affiliated with DMV.
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One DMV-style permit question, answer, and plain-English rationale in your inbox. Use it as a quick daily warm-up before the test.