Our other Oklahoma permit practice tests evaluate your understanding of the traffic laws. This free Oklahoma Fines and Limits permit practice test will measure your understanding of the consequences of violating the traffic laws. It is based on the official Oklahoma driver’s manual (Oklahoma SOK Handbook (OK Driver's Manual) 2025) and the Oklahoma Statutes. Like the other Oklahoma practice tests we offer, this practice test comes with our automated assistant. If you get stuck on a question, the assistant can give you a hint or an explanation of the correct answer.
This Fines and Limits permit practice test has 50 multiple-choice questions. Learn what fines and other penalties are imposed for driving under the influence (DUI) for a first offense or repeat offense. (Will you lose your license?) According to Oklahoma law, what is the difference between impaired driving and driving under the influence, and how do the penalties differ? (Try to memorize these fines for your written learner permit test.) If a police officer asks you to submit to chemical testing for alcohol but you refuse, will you lose your license? How many points are added to your driving record for such common violations as speeding, running a stop sign, passing a stopped school bus, and failing to yield the right-of-way? Is there any way to have some of those points removed from your driving record?
The consequences of violating the traffic laws aren’t limited to legal penalties. Disregarding the rules can lead to accidents – possibly fatal accidents. In the United States, about 37 people die in alcohol-related crashes every day: about one fatality every 39 minutes. About 28 percent of all traffic deaths involve alcohol consumption. In 2022, 13,524 people died in traffic crashes in which alcohol was a contributing factor. That same year, there were also 12,151 speeding-related deaths nationwide. Speeding was a contributing factor in 29 percent of traffic fatalities.
In Oklahoma in 2021, there were 66,074 total traffic crashes processed by the police, of which 681 were fatal, with 762 fatalities. 191 of these traffic fatalities were alcohol related;182 of the fatalities were speeding related. These total crashes involved 120,498 drivers, of whom 511 were killed. The most common contributing factor identified in total crashes was failing to yield the right-of-way (11.1%), but the most common contributing factor in fatal crashes was speeding (13.1%).
Learning about violations, penalties, and license restrictions will help you become a safer driver.
Stay safe!