Overview
A learner's permit (also called a learner's license or driver's permit) is the first step toward a full driver's license in every US state. The permit allows supervised practice driving before you can be licensed to drive alone. Every state administers its own permit and license process, but the structure is similar nationwide: written knowledge test, supervised practice period, then road test.
Eligibility requirements
Minimum age varies by state (most allow permits at 15 or 16). You need proof of identity, residency in the state, and (for minors) parental consent. Most states require a vision screening at the time of application.
The Georgia licensing process, step by step
- Read the official driver handbook. Every state publishes a free driver handbook covering road signs, rules of the road, safe driving practices, and state-specific law. You will be tested on its content.
- Schedule and take the written knowledge test. Most states allow online appointments. The test is typically 25-50 multiple-choice questions on signs and rules; passing is usually 80% correct. Many states require an appointment in person.
- Pass the vision screening. Standard vision check at the DMV; corrective lenses are noted on your license if required.
- Pay the permit fee and receive your permit. Permit fees vary by state from about $10 to $50.
- Complete the required supervised practice period. Most states require 30-50 hours of supervised practice driving, including a minimum amount of nighttime hours, before you can take the road test. You must be accompanied by a licensed adult driver age 21 or older in the front passenger seat.
- Take and pass the road test. An examiner rides with you and scores your performance on basic maneuvers (turns, stops, parallel parking, three-point turn) and safe driving habits.
- Receive your full driver's license. After the road test you receive your provisional or full license depending on age. Minors often have intermediate restrictions (passenger limits, night-driving curfews) that lift at adulthood.
Georgia DMV Permit at a glance
- License fee: approximately $10 (verify current amount with Georgia Department of Driver Services — fees change periodically)
- Georgia-specific note: Georgia requires 40 hours of supervised driving (6 at night) for applicants under 18; the permit period is minimum 12 months.
What to study
The state driver handbook is the only source you need for the written test. Read it cover to cover, then use practice tests like ours to identify weak areas and study them in the handbook again. The handbook covers road signs, right-of-way rules, speed limits, alcohol and impaired driving laws, parking rules, sharing the road with bicyclists and pedestrians, and emergency procedures.
The official Georgia handbook is published by the Georgia Department of Driver Services. Read it cover to cover before your written exam — practice tests like ours are most useful as a check on your understanding, not a substitute for reading the source.
Free Georgia DMV Permit practice tests
Practice with our state-specific tests until you consistently score above 80%, then schedule your exam with the Georgia Department of Driver Services.
Practice Test
30-question practice test, free, no sign-up.
GeorgiaRoad Signs
25-question practice test, free, no sign-up.
GeorgiaRules of the Road
25-question practice test, free, no sign-up.
Common reasons people fail
Common reasons people fail the permit test: relying on practice tests alone without reading the handbook (real questions cover details practice tests miss), test anxiety leading to misreading questions, and confusing similar-looking sign meanings. Common road test failures: rolling stops at stop signs, failing to check mirrors and blind spots before lane changes, hitting curbs during parking, and unsafe speed for conditions.
After you pass
Keep practicing. Most new drivers crash within the first year of solo driving, and experienced driving is the only way to develop the situational awareness that prevents collisions. If you have a graduated/provisional license, follow the restrictions exactly — they exist because new drivers crash more at night, with peer passengers, and in their first year.
State requirements change
State licensing fees, processes, and requirements change. The information here is based on publicly available materials from the Georgia Department of Driver Services and our understanding of the Georgia process at time of writing. Always verify current requirements directly with the Georgia Department of Driver Services before scheduling your exam or paying fees.