You are driving on an interstate in Vermont and see a large green sign overhead listing the next exit and a destination city. What kind of sign is this?

VT Guide and Information Signs

You are driving on an interstate in Vermont and see a large green sign overhead listing the next exit and a destination city. What kind of sign is this?

  1. A regulatory sign you must obey
  2. A guide sign giving directional information ✓
  3. A warning sign about a hazard ahead
  4. A construction zone sign
Correct answer: B. A guide sign giving directional information

The answer explained

Green guide signs help you plan lane changes and exits well in advance of the gore point where the exit ramp begins. On limited access highways in Vermont the standard sequence is a one mile advance sign, a half mile sign, and the exit direction sign at the gore. Use the advance distance to get into the rightmost through lane and check mirrors before the deceleration lane begins.

Why this rule exists

Lane changes inside a deceleration lane are dangerous because traffic behind you may already be slowing aggressively. Reading guide signs early lets you reposition while everyone is still at highway speed.

The most common mistake

Drivers often wait to see the actual exit before merging right, then cross multiple lanes at the last second. This causes brake checks and rear end crashes near the gore point.

Vermont specific note

Vermont tests on moose collision avoidance and unpaved town highway etiquette. For this question in particular, the Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles aligns with the standard interpretation explained above. Always verify against the most recent Vermont driver handbook before relying on these details for the live exam.

Study tip

Memorize the color code: green is guide, blue is services, brown is recreation, white is regulatory, yellow is warning, orange is work zone, red is prohibition.

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