The Ultimate Vermont Driving Test Cheat Sheet: Pass Your VT Exam!
Your Vermont road test is scheduled, and it's time for that final, laser-focused review. This guide is your smart "cheat sheet," designed to arm you with the most critical information you need to recall when the pressure is on. A Vermont DMV examiner wants to see a driver who is safe, confident, and knowledgeable about the state's specific rules—and this guide will help you prove you are exactly that.
Use this sheet to quickly refresh your memory on the make-or-break elements of the test, from maneuvers to key numbers.
🚨 Automatic Fails: Critical Errors to Avoid at All Costs
These are the non-negotiable mistakes. Committing any of these actions will likely result in an immediate failure of your test, regardless of how well you perform otherwise.
- Incomplete Stop: The "rolling stop" is a classic failure. You must come to a full and complete stop behind the white stop line. Feel the car rock back slightly.
- Striking an Object: Hitting a cone during parallel parking, striking a curb, or making contact with any object will end your test.
- Speeding: Exceeding the speed limit is a major violation. Pay extra attention in school zones and on rural roads.
- Dangerous Action: Any move that forces another driver or a pedestrian to brake hard or swerve to avoid you.
- Examiner Intervention: If the examiner has to give a verbal warning for safety ("Watch out!") or physically take control of the wheel or brake.
- Failure to Yield: Not giving the right-of-way correctly at intersections, to pedestrians, or at yield signs.
- Disobeying Signs or Signals: Running a red light or blatantly ignoring a traffic sign is an instant fail.
🅿️ Parallel Parking: The VT Road Test Requirement
Yes, parallel parking is required on the Vermont road test. It is a major point of evaluation. Practice this until it becomes second nature.
How to Execute It:
- Signal & Position: Signal your intent to park. Pull up parallel to the car in front of the space, about 2-3 feet away. Align your rear bumper with that car's rear bumper.
- Reverse at 45°: Check mirrors and blind spot. Reverse slowly while turning your steering wheel sharply to the right. Stop when the rear corner of the parking space is visible in the middle of your passenger-side window.
- Straighten & Back Up: Straighten the wheel and continue reversing until your front bumper clears the rear bumper of the car in front of you.
- Turn In: Turn the steering wheel sharply to the left and continue backing slowly until your car is parallel to the curb.
- Center Yourself: Pull forward slightly to center your car in the space. You should be within a reasonable distance of the curb.
🔢 Key Numbers to Burn Into Your Brain
Your examiner expects you to know these fundamental Vermont traffic law numbers.
- Speed Limits (Unless Posted Otherwise):
- School Zones: 25 mph (when children are present)
- Business or Residential Districts: 25 mph
- Rural, Paved Roads: 50 mph
- Interstate Highways: 65 mph
- Signaling Distance: You must activate your turn signal at a "reasonable distance" before turning. The nationwide best practice is 100 feet.
- Following Distance: Vermont recommends the Four-Second Rule. Watch the car ahead pass a fixed object (like a sign), then count "one-one thousand, two-one thousand, three-one thousand, four-one thousand." You should not pass the object before you finish counting. This provides a safe buffer.
- Parking Distance From...
- A fire hydrant: 10 feet
- A crosswalk at an intersection: 25 feet
- A stop sign, yield sign, or traffic light: 25 feet
🚗 Other Key Maneuvers & Examiner Focus
The SMOG Check (For Every Lane Change & Turn)
This is a critical observation skill.
- S - Signal: Turn on your blinker first.
- M - Mirrors: Check your rearview and side mirrors.
- O - Over the Shoulder: ALWAYS perform a physical head check into your blind spot.
- G - Go: When it is safe, make your smooth, deliberate move.
Three-Point Turn (Turnabout)
- Signal right and pull over to the side.
- Signal left. Check traffic in all directions. Move forward while turning the wheel sharply left. Stop before the curb.
- Check traffic again. Reverse slowly while turning the wheel sharply right. Look over your right shoulder. Stop before the curb.
- Check traffic. Shift to drive and accelerate into the proper lane.
Parking on a Hill
- Downhill with a Curb: Turn your wheels toward the curb.
- Uphill with a Curb: Turn your wheels away from the curb.
- No Curb (Uphill or Downhill): Turn your wheels toward the edge of the road (the shoulder).
Final Reminders
- Hand Position: Keep both hands on the wheel (9 and 3 or 8 and 4 are ideal).
- Stopping Behind Cars: When stopping behind another vehicle at a light, make sure you can see their rear tires touching the pavement.
- Left Turns: Keep your wheels pointing straight ahead while waiting to turn in an intersection. This prevents you from being pushed into oncoming traffic if you are rear-ended.
You have studied and practiced. This cheat sheet is your final tool to sharpen your focus. Stay calm, drive safely, and show the examiner the confident driver you have become. You've got this!