Before you book the New Hampshire road test
You may not take the New Hampshire road test before your supervised hold period of no minimum has ended. Confirm that the test vehicle is registered, insured, and equipped with working seatbelts at every position, brake lights, turn signals, mirrors, horn, and a windshield free of cracks in the driver's line of sight. The NH DMV examiner will refuse to start the test if any of these fail the pre-trip inspection.
Documents and items to bring
Bring your learner's permit, your supervised-driving log, proof of insurance for the test vehicle, the vehicle's current registration, and your appointment confirmation. Also bring the glasses or contacts you wear when driving — the examiner will note whether you used corrective lenses and a "corrective lenses" restriction may be added to your license.
For a deeper read on this topic across all 50 states, see our right-of-way, speed limits, and alcohol and drugs articles.
What the examiner is grading
The road-test scoresheet covers a fixed set of skills: starting and stopping smoothly, full stops at stop signs, lane positioning, signaling at least 100 feet before turns and lane changes, scanning intersections and mirrors, maintaining safe following distance, parallel parking, backing in a straight line, and obeying all posted signs and signals. Critical errors — running a red light, failing to yield to a pedestrian, hitting the curb hard while parking — are automatic failures regardless of the rest of your score.
Common reasons people fail
The top three failure causes in New Hampshire are rolling stops at stop signs, failing to look over the shoulder before changing lanes (a mirror check alone is not enough), and failing to yield right-of-way at unprotected left turns. Practice these specifically in the week before your test until they are automatic.
After the test
If you pass, you pay the license issuance fee at the counter, get a temporary paper license on the spot, and receive your plastic card by mail in 10–21 business days. If you fail, the examiner will hand you a printed scoresheet showing the items you missed; most New Hampshire counties allow you to schedule a retest within a few business days, though a re-test fee applies.
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.