New Hampshire driver's permit study guide

Studying for the New Hampshire learner's permit exam? This page summarizes the key rules tested by the New Hampshire Division of Motor Vehicles, links you to the full practice test, and points you at the topics worth revisiting before test day.

Permit age
15.5
License age
16
Max highway
70 mph
School zone
10 mph
BAC limit
0.08%
Capital
Concord

What the New Hampshire permit test covers

The New Hampshire Division of Motor Vehicles permit knowledge exam draws from the official New Hampshire driver's manual. Most candidates see between 25 and 50 multiple-choice questions, with a passing score of around 80%. The exam blends three topic areas: road sign recognition, traffic laws unique to New Hampshire, and general safe-driving practices that apply nationwide.

You should be ready to identify signs by their color and shape alone — for example, an octagonal red sign always means stop, even if the word is obscured. You'll be tested on right-of-way at four-way stops, uncontrolled intersections, and roundabouts. Expect questions about New Hampshire's posted speed limits: the maximum on rural interstates is 70 mph, with reduced school-zone limits around 10 mph and typical urban limits near 30 mph. Several questions will involve impaired driving — New Hampshire's legal BAC threshold for drivers 21 and older is 0.08%, and drivers under 21 are subject to near-zero tolerance.

Documents you'll need at the New Hampshire DMV

Before you can take the knowledge test, you must visit a New Hampshire Division of Motor Vehicles office in person. Bring proof of identity (typically a birth certificate or passport), a Social Security card or other proof of your SSN, and at least two documents proving New Hampshire residency. If you're under 18, a parent or legal guardian usually needs to sign a consent form on site. Fees vary by office — check the official site at the New Hampshire DMV before you go so there are no surprises.

Suggested study plan

  • Day 1–2: Read PermitPrep's road signs catalog. Focus on shapes and colors so you can recognize signs even without the lettering.
  • Day 3–4: Work through the traffic laws guides on right-of-way, school buses, and impaired driving — they appear on almost every state exam.
  • Day 5: Take the New Hampshire practice test. Read every explanation, even on questions you got right.
  • Day 6–7: Review missed questions and re-take the test until you score above 90%. Then schedule your appointment.

Common New Hampshire-specific topics to review

The New Hampshire driver's manual emphasizes a few rules more strongly than other states. School-zone speed enforcement is strict — fines often double when children are present. The state follows the national 0.08% BAC rule for adult drivers (Utah is the only state with a lower 0.05% threshold). Implied consent applies: refusing a chemical test after a lawful traffic stop triggers an automatic license suspension regardless of guilt. Move-over laws require shifting one lane away from any stopped emergency or roadside-assistance vehicle when safe to do so.

Start the New Hampshire practice test →