How to Get Your Mississippi Driver's License (2026)
A step-by-step walkthrough of the Mississippi license process — eligibility, knowledge test, learner permit, supervised practice, road test, and full license.
1. Make sure you're eligible
To apply for a Mississippi learner permit you must be at least 15 years old and able to prove your identity, your Social Security number, and your Mississippi residency. If you're under 18, a parent or guardian must sign the application.
- Proof of identity (birth certificate, passport, or equivalent)
- Proof of Social Security number
- Two proofs of Mississippi residency (utility bill, bank statement, lease, etc.)
- Parent/guardian signature if under 18
- Vision-screening pass (administered at the office)
2. Pass the Mississippi permit knowledge test
The Mississippi knowledge test has 30 questions; you must answer 24 correctly (80%) to pass. Topics: traffic laws, road signs, right-of-way, safe driving, and Mississippi-specific rules. Retake policy: If you fail the Mississippi knowledge test, you can retake it the next business day. If you fail three times in a row, you must wait 30 days after the last failed attempt before trying again. All knowledge exams must be taken in person.
The best prep path is to read the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau driver manual end-to-end, then take repeated practice tests until you score 90%+ consistently. Use our free MS practice test and the full 30-question exam.
3. Get your learner permit
After passing the knowledge test, you'll be issued a Mississippi learner permit. Bring the documents above to the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau office and pay the permit application fee (currently $7).
- Your permit lets you drive only with a supervising licensed adult in the front passenger seat.
- Permit validity is typically 1 to 2 years; check yours so you know when it expires.
- The permit must usually be held for a minimum waiting period (often 6 months for minors) before you can take the road test.
- Most states impose GDL curfews and passenger limits during the permit phase.
4. Complete your supervised practice hours
During the permit phase, you log supervised driving hours. Mississippi's specific count varies; most states require 30-50 hours of total practice including 10 hours of night driving. Build the habit early — these hours need to be real, varied, and on different road types.
- Always drive with a licensed adult age 21+ in the front passenger seat.
- Typical night-driving restriction: no driving between midnight and 5 AM (varies by age/phase).
- Typical passenger restriction: no non-family passengers under 21 for the first 6 months.
- Log every hour. Many states require you to bring the log to the road test.
- Practice the maneuvers you'll be tested on: parallel parking, three-point turns, lane changes, highway merging.
5. Pass the road test and get your full Mississippi license
Schedule your Mississippi road test through the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau. The examiner will evaluate vehicle control, lane changes, turns, parking, and following traffic laws. Bring your permit, required documents, and a vehicle in good working condition with valid registration and insurance.
After passing, pay the license fee (currently $25 for an adult). You'll receive a temporary paper license immediately; the plastic card arrives by mail. If you're under 18, your initial license is usually a provisional/intermediate license with night and passenger restrictions; full unrestricted privileges kick in at 18 or after you've held the provisional license for a state-specified period.
The full Mississippi steps in order
As listed by the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau:
- Be at least 15 years old.
- Gather proof of identity, U.S. citizenship or legal presence, Social Security number, and Mississippi residency.
- If under 17, have a parent or legal guardian sign your application.
- Visit a Mississippi Driver Service Bureau office in person.
- Pay the $7 learner's permit fee and pass the vision screening.
- Pass the 30-question knowledge test (24 correct to pass).
- Receive your regular learner's permit and hold it for at least 12 months while practicing with a licensed driver 21 or older.
- At age 16, pass the road skills test to get the Intermediate License, then the full Class R license at age 16.5.
FAQ: Getting Your Mississippi License
How old do I need to be to get a Mississippi learner permit?
You must be at least 15 to apply for a Mississippi learner permit. Some states allow a slightly earlier start through approved driver-education programs; the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau has the current minimum for each permit class.
How many questions are on the Mississippi permit test?
The Mississippi permit knowledge test has 30 multiple-choice questions. You must answer at least 24 correctly (80%) to pass.
What documents do I need for my Mississippi permit?
You typically need proof of identity (birth certificate or passport), proof of Social Security number, and two proofs of Mississippi residency. If you are under 18, a parent or guardian must also sign. Check the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau for the complete current list before you go.
What are the GDL (graduated licensing) restrictions in Mississippi?
Most states impose night-driving curfews (commonly 11 PM or midnight to 5 AM), passenger limits for new drivers, and a minimum supervised practice period (often 6-12 months). Exact restrictions vary; the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau driver manual lists Mississippi's current GDL phases.
Can non-citizens get a Mississippi driver license?
Yes — Mississippi issues driver licenses and permits to eligible non-citizens. You will need to provide acceptable identity and lawful-presence documents. Specific requirements depend on your immigration status — contact the Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau for the current accepted document list.
Start preparing for the knowledge test
Our free MS practice tests mirror the real Mississippi Department of Public Safety (DPS) Driver Service Bureau exam — road signs, traffic laws, and Mississippi-specific rules. Take them until you score 90%+, then go pass the real one.