Georgia Permit Practice Test: Driver's Condition

Georgia drivers learn this fast: your body and your brain are part of the car. If either one is off, your driving gets weird in a hurry. And yes, the DDS tests you on it. A lot.

On the Georgia permit exam, you’ll see alcohol limits, fatigue, distraction, and medical issues because those topics show up in crash reports everywhere—from Atlanta highways to back roads outside Savannah. Not optional.

It’s also not just “use common sense.” Georgia law spells out what you can do, what you can’t do, and what you’re required to do. On test day, time pressure makes you misread, and two answers look right. Read twice. Then pick the safest answer that actually matches the rule.

Whether you’re practicing in Augusta, dealing with downtown Macon traffic, or merging on I‑285 near Sandy Springs, your condition changes every decision you make. Stay ready.

State: GeorgiaTime to pass: 1 minQuestions: 5
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Alcohol Laws and BAC Limits in Georgia State

Know the numbers. Georgia’s standard legal limit for most adult drivers is 0.08% BAC, and that number pops up constantly on the georgia driving test. But it’s not the only limit you need.

Under 21? Zero tolerance. Georgia uses a much lower BAC threshold for drivers who aren’t 21 yet, and you can get DUI consequences even when you’re nowhere near 0.08%. It surprises people. A lot.

Commercial drivers have a stricter standard too. Watch the wording. If the question hints at a CDL, a commercial vehicle, or “operating in commerce,” that’s your clue that the BAC limit is lower and the penalties can hit harder.

Also, don’t ignore consequences. A DUI can mean arrest, court, fines, license suspension, and required programs. And if you’re flying down a two‑lane road outside Athens or Roswell, you can stack penalties with other Georgia rules—like the Super Speeder surcharge—on top of local tickets.

Quick memory check:

  • 0.08% is the standard adult limit.
  • Under 21 has a much lower limit.
  • Commercial drivers are held to a tougher limit. This one trips people up.

Fatigue and Distracted Driving Risks

Sleep matters. A tired driver misses brake lights, lane markers, and pedestrians stepping off the curb in downtown Savannah. Reaction time slows. Judgment gets sloppy. That’s how people drift out of their lane on long stretches like I‑16 toward Macon.

It adds up. Fast.

On the written test, fatigue questions can sound like “what would you do?” but the safest option is usually the simple one: stop driving, rest, switch drivers, or pull off before it gets dangerous. Coffee helps some people feel alert, but it doesn’t erase fatigue. Not really.

Now distraction. Georgia’s Hands‑Free law is a huge deal and it shows up on almost every Georgia Permit Practice Test style quiz. Since 2018, you can’t hold or support a phone while driving. Not even at a red light. Not even in crawling traffic on the Downtown Connector.

Hands-free only.

The tricky part is what’s allowed. Usually, voice commands are fine, and a single tap to start or end a call is typically what questions are aiming at. But scrolling, typing, reading, recording video, or holding the device is a no. The word “hold” is the trap.

Common test traps:

  • Thinking “I’m stopped” means “I can use my phone.”
  • Mixing up “may” vs “must” when the question asks what you’re required to do.
  • Forgetting repeat offenses can raise fines and consequences. This one trips people up.

One more Georgia detail that connects here: keep right except to pass. Distracted drivers camp in the left lane because they’re not paying attention, and in Atlanta that can turn into aggressive tailgating fast. Stay aware. Keep right. Pass and move back.

Medical Conditions and Safe Driving

Be honest. The DDS doesn’t care about medical conditions to punish you—they care because certain issues can make you unsafe behind the wheel. The exam keeps it basic: vision, alertness, and anything that can cause sudden impairment.

Vision comes up constantly. You’ll see questions about minimum vision standards, corrective lenses, and what happens if you can’t meet the requirement. If you need glasses or contacts to drive safely, your license may require them. Simple.

Medical issues can also include seizures, fainting spells, diabetes-related low blood sugar, or medications that cause drowsiness. A lot of permit questions are really asking, “What’s the safest move?” not “What’s easiest?” If your condition could make you black out or lose control, you shouldn’t be driving until it’s controlled and cleared.

No shortcuts.

Think about where you drive, too. Metro traffic around Johns Creek or South Fulton leaves almost no room for hesitation, and rural roads near Augusta can get dark with deer moving at dusk. If your condition slows your reaction time, the risk is bigger than it feels from the driver’s seat.

What to do:

  • Follow your doctor’s advice and read medication warnings.
  • Don’t drive if symptoms are active or unpredictable.
  • Comply with medical reviews if the state requires it. This one trips people up.

Study these three areas carefully and you’ll recognize them instantly on your next permit practice run and when you sit for the Georgia driving test. Stay sharp. Drive safe.

Georgia DDS Driver Handbook PDF 2025

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