The Utah road test
A plain-language guide, checked against the Utah Driver License Division (Utah DLD): who the test is for, what to bring, how it is scored, and what a retake really costs.
The rule that decides your path
The Utah road test, also called the behind-the-wheel or driving skills test, is the final exam the Utah DLD gives before it issues a driver's license. New drivers can take the Utah driving test at 16, after logging 40 hours of supervised driving. The drive includes parallel parking.
Utah sets a specific pre-license education step every new driver has to clear. These supervised hours apply to drivers ages 15 to 18; at 19 or older the requirement is waived if you complete driver's ed. You can take the test at the DLD at 16, or at 15 through a third-party tester or high school program. First-time drivers who have never been licensed must pass the Traffic Safety and Trends Exam before getting a permanent license.
Below you'll find the full Utah road test requirements: who qualifies, what to bring, how examiners score the drive, and the retake rules if you don't pass the first time. On our Driving Index, Utah's written knowledge test ranks tied for 26th-hardest of 51.

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Supervised hours before the Utah road test
These are hours you spend driving with a licensed adult, usually a parent, before you can take the test. Keep a log as you go, on paper or in an app, because the state can ask to see it. Practice in a mix of conditions, day and night, highways and quiet streets, rain and clear weather, and get the night hours in early, since those are the ones most people leave to the last minute.
What to bring to the Utah road test
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Documents
Your vehicle must have
Who comes with you. A person 21 or older (or a parent, guardian, or spouse who is at least 18) comes with you to the DLD. During the test, only you and the examiner are in the vehicle.
If you fail the Utah road test
Here's how a retake works in Utah: One test per day; you may wait days or weeks for an appointment. All tests must fall within 6 months of paying the fee. After 3 failed attempts, you pay another fee. There is no standalone road-test fee published.
Beyond any fee, a retry usually means another day off work or school, another ride to the office, and another car to borrow, so failing costs far more than it looks on paper.
Passing on the first try is the cheapest way through. A first license runs $52 for a regular Class D license (age 21 or older); $39 for a provisional license under 21.
How the Utah road test is scored
The examiner scores you on a tablet, covering the rules of the road plus your behavior, technique, posture, turns, starting and stopping, parking, signs, backing, U-turns, steering, and intersections. No numeric passing threshold is published.
Mistakes that end the test right away
Do any of these and the examiner stops the drive, no matter how well the rest went.
- If you receive a traffic citation for a moving violation, disobey signs or signals, speed, roll through stops, or ignore traffic laws.
- If you do not yield to pedestrians or other roadway users.
- If you are involved in an avoidable crash or if your vehicle has physical contact with other vehicles, objects, or pedestrians.
- If you commit any unsafe act or another driver is forced to take evasive action in order to prevent a crash.
- If you put the vehicle over sidewalks or curbs unnecessarily.
- If the examiner has to take control of the vehicle.
- If you drive too fast or too slow.
Before the road test
Pass the Utah written test on your first try
Nearby road-test guides.
Six more states, neighbours first, then the closest matches on test difficulty.
Test specifications, fees and laws change. This guide was last verified July 2026; always confirm current requirements with the Utah DLD (dld.utah.gov) before booking a test. DMV IQ is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or associated with any state DMV, DPS, MVD, or BMV.
Spot an error? Email [email protected] and we'll get it corrected.
Sources for this guide (3 official Utah DLD pages)
- Eligibility: https://dld.utah.gov/learner-permit/
- What to bring: https://dld.utah.gov/wp-content/uploads/Driver-Handbook-REV-3.2026.pdf
- Test format: https://dld.utah.gov/wp-content/uploads/Driver-Handbook-REV-3.2026.pdf
- Scoring: https://dld.utah.gov/wp-content/uploads/Driver-Handbook-REV-3.2026.pdf
- Retakes: https://dld.utah.gov/wp-content/uploads/Driver-Handbook-REV-3.2026.pdf
- Fees: https://dld.utah.gov/fees/
- Handbook (2025-2026): https://dld.utah.gov/wp-content/uploads/Driver-Handbook-REV-3.2026.pdf
Current as of 2026-07-16. Official Utah sources only; anything the state does not publish is left out rather than guessed.