Vermont · Road Signs Test

Vermont Road Signs Test

A complete guide to road signs test in Vermont, based on the official VT DMV driver handbook.

Capital: Montpelier Min permit age: 15 Permit fee: $32 Hold period: 12 months

Why Vermont weighs road signs heavily

Roughly one in three questions on the Vermont permit exam is a road-sign question. The VT DMV pulls those questions directly from the federal Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD), which is why the same stop sign in Montpelier is shaped, colored and posted exactly the same way as one in Honolulu or Anchorage. What changes from state to state is which signs appear most often — Vermont highway crews use certain warning, school-zone and construction signs more than others, and your test reflects that mix.

Shape and color shortcuts

Memorize the eight standard sign shapes before you memorize any individual sign. An octagon is always STOP, a downward triangle is always YIELD, a pennant warns of a no-passing zone, a diamond warns of a hazard, a pentagon marks a school zone, a round sign warns of a railroad crossing, and a horizontal rectangle is almost always a guide sign. Color tells you the rest: red prohibits, yellow warns, fluorescent yellow-green flags pedestrians and schools, orange means construction, blue marks motorist services, brown marks recreation, and green provides directional information.

For a deeper read on this topic across all 50 states, see our right-of-way, speed limits, and alcohol and drugs articles.

Vermont-specific sign quirks

In Vermont your residential default speed limit is 25 mph and school zones drop to 25 mph. School-zone signs in Vermont use the fluorescent yellow-green pentagon and are usually accompanied by flashing beacons during arrival and dismissal. Right turn on red allowed after a complete stop unless posted otherwise. Watch for state route shields — Vermont has a distinctive shape your test may ask you to identify alongside the standard Interstate and US route markers.

How the questions are worded

Sign questions on the Vermont permit test usually show a black-and-white drawing or photo of a sign and ask either "What does this sign mean?" or "What should you do when you see this sign?" The wrong answers are often plausible: a yield sign question may include "stop completely" as a distractor. Read each option fully before choosing — examiners deliberately put a half-right answer in front of the fully-correct one.

Practice strategy

Take the practice signs test at the bottom of this page in groups of ten and write down the slug of any sign you missed. Then read its dedicated detail page on PermitPrep. After two clean passes you will know far more signs than the Vermont test will ever ask about — which is exactly the cushion you want when one curveball appears.

Quick facts about Vermont

  • Capital: Montpelier
  • Minimum permit age: 15
  • Current permit fee: $32
  • Supervised hold period: 12 months
  • Adult BAC limit: 0.08% · Under-21 BAC: 0.02%
  • Default speed limits: 65 mph rural Interstate, 65 mph urban Interstate, 25 mph residential, 25 mph school zone
  • Handheld phone use: banned
  • Vision standard: 20/40 acuity in at least one eye, corrected or uncorrected
  • Reinstatement fee after suspension: $71
  • Official source: VT DMV

Other Vermont guides on PermitPrep

Each link below opens a dedicated Vermont page. Every guide is built from the same official VT DMV handbook so the rules stay consistent across topics.

Ready to test what you have learned? Take the free Vermont permit practice test — 20 randomized questions, instant grading, full explanations.