DrivingPractice + Mock

Florida DMV — Class E Knowledge Test

Florida DHSMV written exam — pass 80% (40/50)

30
Minutes
20
Questions
54,100
Learners
75%
Pass mark
★ Start here · Official guidance

From practice to the real exam

Verified sources
01
Eligibility
Must be at least 15 for learner permit. Anyone under 18 must complete the TLSAE course.
02
Complete TLSAE
Take the Traffic Law & Substance Abuse Education (4-hour) course online from an approved provider.
03
Make appointment
Book online via FLHSMV. Walk-ins limited.
04
Pass written + vision
50-question test on road rules and signs. Pass mark: 40/50 (80%).
05
Get your Class E permit
Begin supervised driving. After 12 months (or 18th birthday) take the driving skills test.
Official resources
Heads up: Links open in a new tab and go to government / awarding-body sites. AceMark is not affiliated — always verify deadlines and fees on the official page.
Exam blueprint

What this exam covers

5 topics · 20 questions
01Traffic laws
35%7 questions
02Traffic signs
20%4 questions
03Right of way
20%4 questions
04Safe driving
15%3 questions
05Speed limits
10%2 questions
The experience

What to expect on test day

Timed simulation
Every mock runs under real exam time pressure. No pauses, no hints — exactly like the day.
Randomised questions
Every attempt draws fresh questions. You cannot memorise your way to a pass — you have to understand.
Integrity monitoring
Tab switches are logged in mock mode. Three switches auto-submits — same discipline as a real proctor.
Detailed results
Topic-by-topic breakdown, every answer explained, and a personalised 5-day study plan when you finish.
How to prepare

Driving study playbook

Four habits that move the needle most — pulled from how high-scorers actually study.

01
Read the official handbook before touching practice tests. The wording matters.
02
Road signs are high-frequency — build visual flashcards for any you miss twice.
03
Take at least three full-length timed mocks before your real test.
04
Hazard perception rewards anticipation — actively predict what could go wrong.