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Newfoundland and Labrador · Last updated

How to Pass the Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit Test on Your First Try

A free, no-nonsense Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit Test prep guide written for new drivers in Newfoundland and Labrador. You'll find what's on the Class 5 knowledge test, a 7-day study plan, exam-day tips and what happens after you pass — plus unlimited practice questions whenever you're ready.

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Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit Test at a Glance

  • 40 questions
  • 85% to pass
  • No time limit
  • 2 sections

The Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit Test is the written knowledge test you must pass to get your Class 5 licence and start driving in Newfoundland and Labrador. It's administered by Motor Registration Division and covers two broad areas: road signs and rules of the road. You must pass each section separately — getting 85% overall isn't enough if you fail one section.

What's on the Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit Test

The test draws from the official Newfoundland and Labrador driver's handbook. Expect questions on these areas:

Rules

Signs

Within those sections you'll see questions on stopping distances, right of way, sharing the road with cyclists and pedestrians, school zones, alcohol and drug rules, seat belts, signalling, and reading regulatory, warning and information signs.

A 7-Day Study Plan That Actually Works

Most people fail the Learner's Permit Test because they read the handbook front to back once and "feel ready". Recognition isn't recall. Here's the plan we'd recommend if you have a week:

  1. Day 1 — Baseline. Take one full mock exam cold. Don't study first. The point is to see where you are.
  2. Day 2 — Signs sprint. Run our Newfoundland and Labrador road signs guide end to end. Most people lose easy points here.
  3. Day 3 — Rules deep-dive. Work through driving rules by topic: right of way, speed limits, alcohol/drug laws.
  4. Day 4 — Practice by category. Use category practice to drill the topics you bombed on Day 1.
  5. Day 5 — AI adaptive session. Run Smart Practice; our algorithm targets your weak areas instead of wasting your time on questions you already know.
  6. Day 6 — Mistake review. Open your wrong-answer list and re-test only those questions until you can explain *why* the right answer is right.
  7. Day 7 — Full mock under exam conditions. One real Learner's Permit Test mock exam, untimed, no breaks. If you pass with margin, book the real test.

Newfoundland and Labrador Test Day: What to Bring & What to Expect

The exact list depends on the Motor Registration Division office you book, but in general:

  • ID — primary photo ID plus a secondary ID confirming your name and date of birth.
  • Vision aid — your glasses or contacts if you wear them; vision screening is usually part of the appointment.
  • Payment — the licence application fee. Methods vary by office.
  • Arrive early — at least 15 minutes. Late arrivals frequently lose their slot.

The knowledge test itself is computer-based at most Newfoundland and Labrador offices. You'll sit at a station, answer 40 multiple-choice questions, and get your result on the spot.

If You Don't Pass the First Time

Failing isn't the end of the world — most jurisdictions let you retry after a short waiting period and a small fee. Two rules of thumb:

  • Don't book the retake until you can consistently score above 95% on our mock exam under timed conditions.
  • Spend retake-prep time on your wrong-answer list, not on re-reading the full handbook.

After You Pass: Your Class 5 Licence and Next Steps

Passing the Learner's Permit Test earns you the Class 5 learner stage. From here:

  • You can drive supervised under the conditions of the Class 5 class — usually with a fully-licensed driver in the front passenger seat and limits on highways, alcohol and passengers.
  • After a minimum waiting period (set by Motor Registration Division) and supervised driving experience, you can book the road test that moves you to the next licence class.
  • Keep your knowledge fresh — even after passing, our most-missed questions page is worth periodic review before the road test.

Why Prep with MyDL.ca

  • 100% free. No paywall, no signup, no ads.
  • 40+ Newfoundland and Labrador-specific questions. Written to match the Newfoundland and Labrador handbook and Motor Registration Division's exam format — not a generic Canadian pool.
  • AI adaptive practice. The algorithm focuses your time on the questions you keep missing.
  • Real mock exams. 40 questions, 85% to pass, untimed — same shape as the real test.
Start Free Practice →

Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit Test — Frequently Asked Questions

How many questions are on the Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit?

The Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit (Class 5) has 40 questions. You must pass each section separately to pass the overall exam.

What score do I need to pass the Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit?

You need 85% to pass the Newfoundland and Labrador Class 5 knowledge test. MyDL.ca offers unlimited free practice until you hit that score.

How long is the Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit?

The Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit is untimed. Our mock exam mirrors the real duration so you practice under realistic conditions.

Is MyDL.ca's Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit practice really free?

Yes — full Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit practice on MyDL.ca is 100% free: 40 questions, mock exams, road signs, no ads, no signup required.

Can I take the real Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit online?

No, the official Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit must be taken in person at a licensing office. MyDL.ca is an independent practice tool — use it to prepare, then book the real test with the issuer.

How many times can I retake the Newfoundland and Labrador Learner's Permit?

Retake rules vary by issuer. With MyDL.ca you can practice unlimited times for free before sitting the official Class 5 knowledge test.

MyDL.ca is an independent study tool and is not affiliated with any government agency. Always verify test fees, retake rules and licence requirements with Motor Registration Division before booking your appointment.