Alcohol Server · Study Guide

Checking IDs — 10 Alcohol Server Certification Practice Questions

Verifying age correctly is the single most important skill an alcohol server has. Practice spotting fake IDs and applying the rules.

Checking identification is where most illegal alcohol sales are prevented — or made. A careful server who verifies a valid, government-issued photo ID, confirms the date of birth, checks that the photo and description match the person, and feels the card for tampering protects themselves and their employer from the serious consequences of selling to a minor. A rushed glance does the opposite.

The questions below cover the practical skills of age verification: which documents are acceptable, how to recognize a fake or altered ID, sensible carding policies, and what to do when an ID can't be verified. Work through them and read each explanation.

Source

How these questions were selected

These 10 questions were curated by the 247SimpleTests Editorial Team from our Seller-Server practice bank. Each was selected because it covers a concept that appears frequently on the real exam and that many candidates find difficult on their first attempt. The full practice test has 30 questions — work through all of them once you've reviewed this guide.

The questions

Question 1

What is the most reliable way to verify a customer's age?

  1. Asking the customer their age
  2. Checking a valid, government-issued photo identification ✓
  3. Judging by their appearance
  4. Asking other customers
▶ Show full explanation

The most reliable way to verify age is to check a valid, government-issued photo ID — such as a driver's license, state ID card, military ID, or passport — that shows the customer's date of birth and photo. Relying on appearance or simply asking the customer's age is not sufficient and is not a defense if the person turns out to be underage. Carefully examining a valid ID is the standard responsible-service practice and the seller's best protection against an illegal sale to a minor.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — ID Verification

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Question 2

Which of the following is a sign that an ID may be fake or altered?

  1. It is made of plastic
  2. The photo, physical description, or information does not match the person, or the card shows signs of tampering ✓
  3. It is issued by another state
  4. The person is nervous
▶ Show full explanation

Signs that an ID may be fake or altered include a photo that does not match the person presenting it, a physical description (height, eye color) that does not match, evidence of tampering or peeling, inconsistent fonts or printing, an unusual feel or thickness, or an expired or improperly formatted card. Out-of-state IDs are legal and common, so that alone is not a red flag, though servers should be familiar with their features. When an ID appears altered or does not match the person, the server should decline the sale.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — Detecting Fake IDs

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Question 3

What is a good practice when examining an ID to confirm age?

  1. Glance at it quickly
  2. Check the date of birth and expiration, verify the photo matches, and feel the card for alterations ✓
  3. Only look at the photo
  4. Trust any ID that looks official
▶ Show full explanation

Good ID-checking practice includes verifying the date of birth (to confirm the person is 21 or older), checking that the ID is not expired, confirming the photo and physical description match the person, and physically handling the card to feel for tampering or alterations. Some servers also do the simple math from the birth date to be sure. Taking a few extra seconds to examine the ID thoroughly is far better than risking an illegal sale. A quick glance is not adequate verification.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — Examining IDs

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Question 4

If a customer cannot or will not provide valid identification when asked, what should the server do?

  1. Serve them anyway if they look old enough
  2. Decline to sell or serve alcohol to them ✓
  3. Ask them to come back later
  4. Serve them a smaller drink
▶ Show full explanation

If a customer cannot or will not produce valid identification when the server has asked for it (for example, because the server cannot confirm the person is 21 or older), the server should decline to sell or serve alcohol. Appearance is not a reliable indicator of age and is not a legal defense. Refusing service when ID cannot be verified protects the server and establishment from the serious consequences of selling to a minor. This is a core responsible-service rule.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — No Valid ID

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Question 5

Why should a server be cautious even when a group includes both adults and possible minors?

  1. Groups are always fine
  2. An adult may buy alcohol and pass it to a minor in the group, which is illegal ✓
  3. Minors cannot enter establishments
  4. Groups get a discount
▶ Show full explanation

A server should be cautious with mixed-age groups because an adult of legal age might purchase alcohol and then pass it to an underage member of the group — a practice that is illegal and that the server can be held responsible for if they reasonably should have known. Watching for this kind of 'second-party' or 'straw' purchase, and refusing service when it appears alcohol is being obtained for a minor, is part of responsible service. The seller's duty does not end once an of-age buyer is identified.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — Second-Party Sales

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Question 6

What is the safest house policy regarding who to card?

  1. Card no one
  2. Card anyone who appears under a set age (such as 30 or 40), or card everyone ✓
  3. Card only people who look nervous
  4. Card only on weekends
▶ Show full explanation

A common and safe house policy is to card anyone who appears to be under a generous threshold age — such as 30 or 40 — or simply to card every customer regardless of apparent age. Because people's apparent age can be misleading, setting the carding threshold well above 21 reduces the chance of missing a minor. Carding everyone removes guesswork entirely and avoids any appearance of discrimination. Servers should follow their establishment's specific carding policy, which is often stricter than the bare legal minimum.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — Carding Policy

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Question 7

Which document is generally acceptable as proof of age?

  1. A school ID with no date of birth
  2. A valid driver's license, state ID, military ID, or passport ✓
  3. A photocopy of an ID
  4. A credit card
▶ Show full explanation

Generally acceptable proof of age includes a valid, unexpired, government-issued photo ID showing date of birth — such as a driver's license, state-issued ID card, military ID, or passport. Documents that are not acceptable typically include photocopies, IDs without a date of birth or photo (like many school IDs), expired IDs (depending on jurisdiction), and non-photo documents like credit cards. Acceptable forms can vary slightly by state, so servers should know what their jurisdiction and employer accept. Using only acceptable documents protects against illegal sales.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — Acceptable Identification

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Question 8

A customer presents an ID that is expired. How should the server generally treat it?

  1. Always accept it
  2. Treat it with caution — an expired ID may not be acceptable proof of age depending on jurisdiction, so verify policy ✓
  3. Refuse all service permanently
  4. Accept it only at night
▶ Show full explanation

An expired ID should be treated with caution because, depending on the jurisdiction and house policy, it may not be acceptable as valid proof of age. Some places do not accept expired IDs at all; others may under limited circumstances. Because an expired ID also raises the possibility that the person no longer matches the photo or is using an old document improperly, the safe approach is to follow the establishment's policy and decline service if a valid, acceptable ID cannot be provided. When unsure, do not serve.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — Expired IDs

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Question 9

What is a 'horizontal' versus 'vertical' format sometimes used on IDs to indicate?

  1. The color of the card
  2. In many states, a vertical ID indicates the holder is under 21, while a horizontal ID indicates 21 or older ✓
  3. Nothing at all
  4. The person's height
▶ Show full explanation

In many states, driver's licenses and ID cards for people under 21 are printed in a vertical (portrait) orientation, while IDs for those 21 and older are printed horizontally (landscape). This visual cue helps servers and sellers quickly flag a potentially underage customer, prompting a careful check of the date of birth. However, the orientation is only a cue, not a substitute for verifying the actual date of birth, and formats vary by state, so servers should always confirm age from the birth date itself.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — ID Orientation

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Question 10

If two customers hand over IDs but one person's ID clearly belongs to someone else, the server should:

  1. Serve both
  2. Decline service for the mismatched ID and not serve alcohol to that person ✓
  3. Serve only the taller one
  4. Keep the ID and serve them
▶ Show full explanation

If an ID clearly belongs to someone else — the photo or physical description does not match the person presenting it — the server should decline to serve alcohol to that individual, because they have not validly verified that the person is of legal age. Using someone else's ID is a common tactic by minors. The server need not make accusations but should simply not complete the sale without valid identification. Following this rule protects the server from the serious consequences of serving a minor. When in doubt, do not serve.

Source: Responsible Beverage Service — Mismatched ID

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Remember the guiding principle that runs through all of these: when you have genuine doubt about a customer's age and can't resolve it with a valid ID, don't serve. The brief discomfort of declining a sale is nothing compared to the fines, criminal charges, and lost certification that can follow an illegal sale to a minor.

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