Where to get the official New Hampshire handbook
The official New Hampshire Driver Handbook is published free of charge by the NH DMV as a downloadable PDF at the official New Hampshire DMV website. Print copies are usually available at every field office. The handbook is the only document the knowledge test is written from — anything not in the handbook will not appear on the test.
Sections that account for most test questions
About a third of the New Hampshire permit test comes from the road-signs chapter. Another quarter is split between right-of-way and speed-limit material. The rest is divided among traffic signals and pavement markings, alcohol and drugs (0.08% adult, 0.02% under 21), sharing the road with cyclists and motorcycles, parking distances, and emergency-vehicle protocol.
For a deeper read on this topic across all 50 states, see our right-of-way, speed limits, and alcohol and drugs articles.
Sections most students skip
Two short chapters cause more failures than any other: the equipment chapter (which covers required vehicle equipment, child-restraint rules and the no adult seat-belt law (only for under 18) seat-belt rule), and the licensing chapter (which covers what to do when your license is lost, suspended, or expired, and the steps to reinstate). Both produce one or two questions every test, and they are easy points if you read them.
How to read the handbook efficiently
Read the handbook once cover-to-cover at normal speed. Then re-read only the road-signs chapter, the right-of-way chapter and the alcohol chapter, and quiz yourself with PermitPrep's state-specific practice test after each. The third pass should be only the questions you missed on the practice tests; that targeted re-read is what separates an 80% pass from a 95% pass.
Using the handbook on test day
You may not bring the handbook into the test, but you can refer to it before you check in. Many New Hampshire drivers walk through the road-signs chapter one final time in the parking lot. The NH DMV also has a touchscreen tutorial at the test station; use it — it counts toward the time limit but it teaches you the testing interface in under a minute.
Quick facts about New Hampshire
- Capital: Concord
- Minimum permit age: 15 years 6 months
- Current permit fee: $10
- Supervised hold period: no minimum
- Adult BAC limit: 0.08% · Under-21 BAC: 0.02%
- Default speed limits: 70 mph rural Interstate, 55 mph urban Interstate, 25 mph residential, 10 mph school zone
- Handheld phone use: banned
- Vision standard: 20/40 acuity in at least one eye, corrected or uncorrected
- Reinstatement fee after suspension: $55
- Official source: NH DMV
Other New Hampshire guides on PermitPrep
Each link below opens a dedicated New Hampshire page. Every guide is built from the same official NH DMV handbook so the rules stay consistent across topics.
- New Hampshire Permit Practice Test — Practice test for New Hampshire drivers.
- New Hampshire Driving Permit Guide — Permit guide for New Hampshire drivers.
- New Hampshire Road Signs Test — Signs test for New Hampshire drivers.
- New Hampshire Traffic Laws Summary — Traffic laws for New Hampshire drivers.
- New Hampshire Right-of-Way Rules — Right of way for New Hampshire drivers.
- New Hampshire Speed Limits Explained — Speed limits for New Hampshire drivers.
- New Hampshire DUI Laws — DUI laws for New Hampshire drivers.
- New Hampshire Cell Phone Laws — Cell phone laws for New Hampshire drivers.
Ready to test what you have learned? Take the free New Hampshire permit practice test — 20 randomized questions, instant grading, full explanations.