Florida Permit Practice Tests & Driver Handbook Study

Welcome to the Florida hub on PermitPrep. Everything here is built around the rules that the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles actually tests on the written knowledge exam. The state exam pulls from the official driver handbook published by the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, and the practice content on this page mirrors the topics, language, and difficulty of the real test.

Florida requires a four hour traffic law and substance abuse course before the first permit. That detail is the kind of state-specific quirk that catches first-time test takers off guard. PermitPrep highlights Florida specific rules in the answer explanation for every relevant question so you study them in context rather than memorizing isolated trivia.

Start studying Florida

  • Florida Permit Practice Test — a full set of practice questions covering every topic on the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles exam.
  • Florida Road Signs Guide — regulatory, warning, guide, and work zone signs you will see on the exam and on the road.
  • Florida Traffic Laws — right of way, speed limits, parking, alcohol law, school zones, and more.

What the Florida permit exam covers

The written knowledge exam in Florida tests your understanding of the rules of the road and your ability to recognize traffic signs by shape and color. Expect roughly equal coverage of three buckets: signs and signals, vehicle control rules, and impaired driving and special conditions. The exam in Florida typically has a passing threshold of around eighty percent. If you take a PermitPrep practice test and score below that, study the explanation pages for every question you missed before retaking.

Key Florida rules to know

Posted speed limits in Florida reach 70 mph on rural interstate sections, drop to about 30 mph in urban business districts, and fall to 20 mph in marked school zones. The per se BAC limit for adult drivers is 0.08 percent, lowered to 0.02 percent for drivers under 21, and 0.04 percent for commercial drivers. Florida does not have a universal hands-free phone law for adults, though distracted driving may still be cited. Right turn on red is generally permitted after a complete stop unless a sign prohibits it.

Practice question topics for Florida

Where to take the official exam

The official Florida permit knowledge exam is administered by the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles at offices throughout the state. Bring proof of identity, residency, and your Social Security number, plus the application fee in the form your office accepts. Most Florida offices require an appointment booked online in advance through the official portal at https://www.flhsmv.gov.

After you pass

The Florida permit allows you to drive on public roads only when accompanied by a licensed adult in the front passenger seat. Most teen drivers must hold the permit for at least six months before applying for a full license, and Florida imposes nighttime and passenger restrictions during the early licensure period. Use the permit period to build real driving experience in a variety of conditions, especially night driving and rain.

Florida at a glance
  • Capital: Tallahassee
  • DMV: Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles
  • Top posted speed: 70 mph
  • Adult BAC limit: 0.08%
  • Under 21 BAC: 0.02%
  • School zone: 20 mph
  • Right turn on red: Allowed (default)
  • Hands-free phone law: Limited

Official Florida DMV →