Our free Oregon Fines and Limits permit practice test is specially designed to test your knowledge of the consequences of violating traffic laws. It is based on the official Oregon driver’s manual (Oregon DMV Handbook (OR Driver's Manual) 2024) and the Oregon Revised Statutes. Like the other Oregon 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 test has 50 multiple-choice questions and is up to date as of December 2024. Learn what the limits on blood alcohol content (BAC) are for drivers your age. Learn what the penalties are for driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII). Can you be sentenced to jail for a first offense? What fines will you be facing? (Learn these fines for the instruction permit test.) In Oregon, what are the penalties for road rage? Suppose you are convicted of driving under the influence (DUI) while driving in another state, and that state suspends your driving privileges. What will happen to your driving privileges in Oregon? You know that hit and run is a serious traffic offense where human pedestrians are concerned. But how serious is it to strike a cat and leave the accident scene without stopping? Also learn what some of the consequences are for underage drinking.
In the United States, about 37 people die in alcohol-related crashes every day: that’s about one fatality every 39 minutes. About 40 percent of all traffic deaths involve alcohol-impaired drivers. In 2022, 13,524 people died in traffic crashes in which alcohol impairment 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 2020, 10.83 percent of Oregon’s drivers had at least one speeding ticket on their driving record. In Oregon in 2022, there were 601 traffic fatalities, including three children under the age of five. Of these fatalities, 232 (39 percent) were alcohol related (blood alcohol concentration at or above 0.08), and 215 (36 percent) were speeding related.
Learning about citations, violations, alcohol-related penalties, and license restrictions will help you become a safer driver. Best of luck!