In the Sooner State, you can take your first major step toward driving independently by earning a learner license. This requires passing the Oklahoma DPS Written Knowledge Examination and a vision screening. Until you pass these tests, you may not begin supervised driving. The material tested on the knowledge exam is drawn directly from the Oklahoma Class D Driver Manual, and you’ll need a minimum passing score of 80 percent. If you score below that, a delay and retest fee applies. Our AI-powered Oklahoma DPS Written Permit Test Questions & Answers Practice Tests are expert-crafted to remove unnecessary fluff and focus on the material needed to pass the test.
The written examination is designed to measure practical understanding, not surface memorization. For this reason, static pdfs and printed study guides do not adequately prepare applicants for the official exam. The exam questions require you to apply Oklahoma traffic laws to real driving situations, including right-of-way rules, proper responses to traffic control devices, speed regulations, safe following distances, and how to adjust for weather conditions. You must understand proper yielding to pedestrians, stopping for school buses, and moving over for emergency vehicles stopped along the roadway. Distracted driving, such as texting while driving, carries serious legal consequences. Conceptual mastery of this material is essential. Our interactive practice tests help you develop this deeper level of understanding, with photorealistic questions, immediate feedback on each response, and a final review in each session that highlights weak areas for further study. Also, our Challenge Bank™ remembers any questions you miss and recycles them until you answer correctly, ensuring you are prepared with all of the test material. Once you master this practice test, try another: https://driving-tests.org/oklahoma/oklahoma-permit-practice-test/.
Oklahoma allows applicants to begin the licensing process at age 15½. For those under eighteen, the learner license is the first stage of the state’s graduated driver licensing structure. After passing the knowledge and vision tests, the permit must be held for at least 180 days in addition to other requirements. If you are eighteen or older, you must still pass the same knowledge and vision examinations, but you are not subject to the graduated licensing requirements. Once prepared and after meeting all testing standards, you may proceed to the driving skills examination for full Class D licensure.
Check out our Road Signs and Fines and Limits Practice Tests for more review.