NJMVC knowledge test — what trips people up most

by mkayla_r 200 views4 replies
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mkayla_rOP
May 23, 2026

Taking my NJ knowledge test for a standard Class D license next week. I've been studying the NJ Driver Manual but I want to know where the tricky questions actually come from based on people who've recently taken it.

I feel solid on signs — regulatory, warning, informational — and basic right-of-way rules. Where I'm less confident is the specific NJ laws that differ from general driving rules I know from other states: things like the Move Over law specifics, cellphone and handheld device rules, and the graduated license restrictions for younger drivers.

Speed limits in specific zones (school zones, construction zones with workers present vs absent) also seem like the kind of specific numerical question that shows up on these tests and gets people who studied the general content but not the NJ-specific details.

Any recent test-takers: was it mostly straightforward manual content or were there a lot of specific-number questions that required exact recall?

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nico_b
May 23, 2026

The GDL (Graduated Driver License) restrictions come up even if you're not a teen driver — they ask questions about passenger limits, curfew hours for provisional licensees, and what constitutes a violation. Read that section of the manual carefully.

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tamara_w
May 25, 2026

Move Over law is absolutely tested. Know that it applies to tow trucks and utility vehicles in addition to emergency vehicles, and know what the requirement is when you can't safely change lanes (reduce speed to 25 below the posted limit). That specific detail shows up.

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sophie_m
May 25, 2026

Specific numbers do appear — school zone speed limit (25 mph), following distance rules, the blood alcohol threshold for different driver categories. Don't just understand the concepts; know the actual numbers for NJ specifically because they sometimes differ from what people assume.

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ExamReady_K
June 11, 2026
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I passed mine about two months ago while working full time, so I get it. What tripped me up wasn't signs — it was the specific numbers. Speed limits in school zones, following distance in feet, how many feet before an intersection you need to signal. I'd been reading the manual in 20-minute chunks during lunch and before bed, and I found that drilling with a free njmvc driver services practice set helped me catch the stuff I'd glossed over while skimming.

The other thing that caught me off guard was right-of-way at uncontrolled intersections — not the basic stuff you already know, but the edge cases where two cars arrive at the same time from different directions. Read those scenarios slowly because the wording matters. You're probably fine on signs, so put your last few study sessions into the number-heavy rules and you'll be solid.

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