Failed the HI Permit Test? Here's Exactly What to Do.
Don't panic — failing is more common than you think. Most people who fail do so for the same fixable reasons. Here's how to turn it around fast.
If you fail the Hawaii permit test, you must wait at least 7 days before retaking it. Use the time to study the parts you got wrong. The manual is free online in many languages. Take practice tests until you score above 90% several times in a row.
The 5 Most Common Reasons People Fail the HI Permit Test
Spotting which one tripped you up is the fastest way to fix it. Most retakes pass on the second try once people address the right gap.
1. Skipped reading the driver manual
The official Hawaii driver manual is the source of every test question. Skimming a study guide is not enough — every section has at least one question that ends up on the real exam.
2. Didn't study road signs by shape and color
Road-signs questions are a high share of every state's permit test. If you can't identify a sign by its shape alone (octagon = stop, diamond = warning) without reading the words, you'll lose points.
3. Right-of-way and 4-way stops confused you
Right-of-way rules at intersections, roundabouts, and 4-way stops are the single most-missed topic across every state. Memorize the order: first to arrive goes first; ties go to the driver on the right.
4. Missed Hawaii-specific laws
Every state has its own GDL restrictions, speed limits, cell-phone laws, and BAC rules. Questions about Hawaii-specific rules trip up test-takers who studied generic content. Use the Hawaii driver manual, not a national guide.
5. Test anxiety and rushing
Some people know the material but rush, second-guess themselves, or freeze. Taking timed practice tests beforehand is the best way to build confidence — when the real test feels familiar, anxiety drops.
The fix
Read the Hawaii driver manual end-to-end, study road signs by shape and color, and take multiple full-length practice tests until you score 90%+ consistently. Then go retake the real test.
Your 3-Day Study Plan Before Retaking
A focused plan beats unstructured studying. Three days, three goals.
Read the manual
Read the Hawaii driver manual cover to cover. Focus on traffic laws, road signs, right-of-way, and alcohol / drug laws. Take notes on anything that surprises you.
Study signs + practice
Study our Hawaii road-signs guide, then take 2-3 full practice tests. Review every wrong answer carefully and read why the correct answer is right.
Simulate the real test
Take one timed full-length practice test under real conditions — no pausing, no looking things up. If you score 90%+, you're ready. Go schedule your retake.
Key Topics to Focus On for the Hawaii Retake
These are the topic clusters every state's permit test draws from. The first two are the highest-yield for retakes.
- Road signs — shapes, colors, and meanings (highest single category)
- Right-of-way rules at intersections, 4-way stops, roundabouts, and yields
- Hawaii speed limits — school zones, residential streets, highways
- Following distance — the 3-4 second rule and adjustments for weather
- DUI / BAC limits — 0.08% for adults, zero-tolerance under 21, implied consent
- GDL restrictions for under-18 drivers — night driving, passenger limits, supervised hours
- Cell phone laws — handheld use, texting bans, hands-free requirements
- Parking — parallel, hill parking, no-parking zones, fire-hydrant distances
- Railroad crossings — when to stop, what to look for
- Emergency vehicles — Move Over law, yielding to sirens, school-bus stops
FAQ: After Failing the Hawaii Permit Test
How soon can I retake the Hawaii permit test after failing?
If you fail the knowledge test, you must wait at least 7 days before retaking it. As of December 2024, Hawaii offers the official knowledge test online statewide via KnowToDrive.
What score do I need to pass the Hawaii permit test?
You need at least 24 of 30 questions correct (80%) to pass the Hawaii DMV permit knowledge test.
Will failing affect my ability to get a Hawaii license later?
No — failing the knowledge test does not go on any permanent driving record and does not affect your ability to eventually be licensed. You just keep studying and retake the test.
What is the best way to study for the Hawaii retake?
Read the Hawaii Department of Transportation (county-administered driver licensing) driver manual end-to-end, study road signs by shape and color, and take multiple full-length practice tests until you score 90%+ consistently. Once you can pass our full 30-question exam twice in a row, you are ready.
Ready to retake? Start practicing now.
Our free HI practice tests mirror the real Hawaii Department of Transportation (county-administered driver licensing) exam. Take them until you score 90%+ — then you're ready.