Road Sign · Guide and Information Signs

Rest Area Sign

Public restroom and parking facilities are ahead.

REST AREA

Shape: Rect H

Color: Blue

Category: Guide and Information Signs

What the Rest Area sign means

Public restroom and parking facilities are ahead.

Federal rest areas usually do not allow overnight parking, only short rest stops.

Where you'll see it

The Rest Area sign belongs to the Guide and Information Signs family. Guide signs help drivers locate routes, services, and points of interest. They are typically green for highway directions, blue for motorist services, and brown for recreation. Drivers usually encounter it at intersections, transitions between road types, or specific hazards on rural and urban roads. The MUTCD specifies its size, mounting height, and reflectivity so it appears the same in every state — which is why a question about this sign on the California permit test is identical to a question about it on the New York or Texas permit test.

How it appears on the DMV permit test

Permit-test questions about the Rest Area sign usually take one of two forms. The first shows a black-and-white drawing of the sign and asks "What does this sign mean?" The second describes a driving scenario and asks "When you see a rest area sign, you should…". The wrong answers are deliberately plausible — for a regulatory sign, "slow down and proceed with caution" is a common distractor against the correct "come to a complete stop and yield." Read every option fully before choosing.

Common mistakes drivers make

The most common real-world mistakes around the Rest Area sign are treating it as advisory when it is mandatory (for regulatory signs) or as mandatory when it is advisory (for warning signs). Yellow diamond warnings tell you what to expect; they are not commands. Red and white regulatory signs tell you what you must do; ignoring them is a citable offense even when no other vehicles are present. Memorize the shape-and-color shortcut and you will rarely confuse the two.

Practice this sign

The Rest Area sign appears on every state's permit test. Take the road-signs section of any of our state-specific practice tests and you will see it within the first 25 questions. Pair this page with the full Guide and Information Signs guide and the master US road signs index to cover every variation you will be asked about.

Want to drill all guide and information signs at once? See every guide and information signs with shapes, colors, and meanings.