Tennessee CDL Practice Test 2026
Questions that match what the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security actually asks. Every one is drawn from the official manual and carries its own explanation.
Real pass oddsTargets weak spots
How we help you prepare
9 CDL test sections - 34-113 questions each. Pick a section to start a focused practice test or drill - each one mirrors a real Tennessee CDL exam section.
Tennessee requirement to pass
50 questions on the real test, 80% passing score (40 of 50), time limit not published
Last verified July 2026 · Tennessee Commercial Driver License Manual

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Tennessee CDL test sections
The Tennessee CDL exam is made up of a general knowledge test plus separate endorsement and section tests. Pick a section to start a focused practice test or drill.
Practice Runs
Complete practice runs to test your knowledge. Runs 1-2 are free.
Tennessee CDL Test 1: General Knowledge
Safe driving techniques, vehicle systems, cargo basics, hours of service
Tennessee CDL Test 2: Air Brakes & Pre-Trip
Air brake systems, inspection procedures, stopping distances, pre-trip checklist
Pro Study Tools
A timed Tennessee simulator, drills built from your misses, and a pass probability that updates as you practice.
Tennessee CDL Exam Simulator 2026
ProIQ Readiness Score™ Analysis
ProTennessee CDL Quick Quiz
ProAbout the Tennessee CDL Knowledge Test
To obtain a Commercial Driver's License in Tennessee, you must first pass the CDL general knowledge written test administered by the DOS. The general knowledge exam consists of 50 multiple-choice questions covering vehicle inspection, basic control, safe driving, transporting cargo, and federal regulations. A score of 80% or higher (40 correct) is required to pass.
CDL Classes and Endorsements
Tennessee issues three CDL classes. Class A covers combination vehicles over 26,001 lbs GVWR when the towed unit exceeds 10,000 lbs - this is what you need for tractor-trailers and most heavy hauling. Class B covers single vehicles over 26,001 lbs such as straight trucks, large buses, and dump trucks. Class C covers vehicles designed for 16+ passengers or those carrying hazardous materials that don't meet Class A or B criteria.
Beyond the general knowledge test, you may need additional written tests for endorsements: Hazardous Materials (H), Tanker (N), Passenger (P), School Bus (S), Doubles/Triples (T), or the combined HazMat-Tanker (X). Each endorsement requires its own written exam, and HazMat also requires a TSA background check.
Entry-Level Driver Training (ELDT)
Since February 2022, federal law requires Entry-Level Driver Training (ELDT) through an FMCSA-registered training provider before you can take the CDL skills test for a Class A or B CDL. ELDT is also required before adding Hazardous Materials, Passenger, or School Bus endorsements. This applies in Tennessee and every other state.
Where to Take the Test
The CDL knowledge test is taken at Tennessee Driver Service Centers statewide or online from home (ages 15-17 only with parental supervision). Walk-ins are typically accepted, though scheduling ahead is recommended. The test is available in English, Spanish. Results are delivered immediately - pass/fail shown on screen or online after completing the test.
Preparing for Your CDL Test
The CDL test draws from the Tennessee CDL Manual and the federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations. Key topics include pre-trip vehicle inspection procedures, air brake systems, coupling and uncoupling, cargo securement, hours-of-service rules, hazard perception, and accident procedures. Tennessee-specific regulations on weight limits, required permits, and designated truck routes may also appear.
Taking practice tests before your appointment is one of the most effective ways to prepare. Focus on understanding road signs and the concepts behind each question rather than memorizing answers - the real test may phrase questions differently than what you studied.
Retake Policy
You must wait 1 day after failing the knowledge test, in person or online, and that wait stays at 1 day for later attempts. Road-test waits scale with errors: 1 day for 7 to 9 errors, 7 days for 10 to 12, 14 days for 13 to 15, and 30 days for 16 or more errors or an automatic failure. No test can be repeated the same day. A $2 fee applies each time you take a PD, D or H test and fail. The at-home online test is open only to ages 15 to 17 and allows 2 attempts; after that you test in person, where no attempt limit is published.
How hard is Tennessee's CDL test, really?
Mid-pack: ranked 32nd of 51.
Find out you are not ready for Tennessee now, not at the testing counter.
The IQ Readiness Score measures six dimensions of CDL test readiness: memory stability, test performance, content coverage, recent accuracy, difficulty mastery, and reaction speed.