About Road Ready
Road Ready is a free practice test for the Nevada DMV written knowledge exam — the test you take for your Nevada learner's permit or driver's license. It's free, it has no ads, it doesn't ask you to sign up, and it doesn't collect your data. There's no catch and nothing to buy.
Why we built it
This started as a dad building a study tool for his own teenager. The DMV handbook is dry, and most "free" practice sites bury the questions under ads or push you toward a paid upgrade right when you're trying to study. So we built the opposite: a practice test that's actually fun to sit down with — a blocky voxel world, an arcade high-score board, and a ridiculous graduation ceremony when you pass all five tests.
It worked well enough that we decided to just give it to everyone. CyberSmart is a Nevada IT and security company, and we spend our days telling people that privacy should be the default and that software shouldn't harvest you. Road Ready is us practicing what we preach: a real, useful tool with no ads, no accounts, no tracking, and no upsell. If it helps one more Nevada teenager walk into the DMV confident, that's the whole return we're looking for.
Where the questions come from
All 712 questions are written from the Official Nevada Driver's Handbook (DMV 700, March 2024) — the same document the real exam is based on. Every question includes a short explanation so you learn the rule, not just the answer. We re-check the questions against the handbook and update them when Nevada publishes a new edition.
Road Ready is an unofficial study aid. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to the Nevada DMV or the State of Nevada, and passing our practice tests doesn't guarantee you'll pass the real one. Always confirm current rules with the official handbook at dmv.nv.gov. If you spot a question you think is wrong, please tell us — see the contact below.
Why the bar is set at 90%
Nevada's real Class C knowledge test is 25 questions and you need 80% correct to pass. Road Ready uses 50-question tests and sets the passing bar at 90% on purpose. The idea is simple: if you can consistently beat a harder bar on a bigger question set, the real test should feel easy. It's deliberate over-preparation, not a claim about the real exam's standard.
Your privacy
Your scores and history are stored only on your own device and are never sent to us. There are no accounts, no email collection, no ads, and no third-party trackers. The single optional exception is the Hall of Fame: if you choose to enter it, a 4-character tag and your score are posted to a public, anonymous leaderboard. Please don't use your real name. See our Privacy Policy for the details.