Shoro.aiFailing your Minnesota permit knowledge test stops your license journey immediately. You cannot drive legally without this permit.
No. Minnesota DVS does not allow same-day permit test retakes under any circumstances. You must reschedule, and the next available slot at a Minneapolis or St. Paul exam station is typically 7-10 days out. You must leave, reschedule a new appointment, and return on a different day.
There is no mandatory waiting period between attempts beyond scheduling availability. The first available appointment is typically 7-14 days out at metro exam stations.
Minnesota's approach differs from states that impose escalating waiting periods after multiple failures.
The first two attempts are included in the $29.50 permit application fee. Every attempt from the third onward adds a $10 retesting fee, paid at the counter before the test begins.
| Attempt Number | Cost |
|---|---|
| 1st & 2nd | Covered by $29.50 application fee |
| 3rd and beyond | $10.00 per attempt |
Identify exactly which question categories you failed. Return to those chapters in the Minnesota Driver's Manual. Do not rely on the same practice tests you used before, find new questions covering your weak topics.
The official study materials cover Vanessa's Law, school zone speeds, and other Minnesota-specific topics that trip up test-takers.
No limit exists on the number of attempts, but each costs $10 from the third try onward. There is no lockout period. Repeated failures typically indicate gaps in Minnesota-specific statute knowledge, not general driving skills.
DVS does not overturn failed test results due to applicant disagreement with question content. If a technical glitch recorded a correct answer as wrong, report it to the ADA office if disability-related, or request a supervisor review immediately.
Most failures come down to Minnesota-specific details: exact BAC thresholds, Hands-Free law scope, and Move Over law trigger conditions. Applicants who study generic materials repeatedly fail the same question categories.
A Duluth applicant arrived for their third attempt with only a debit card. That station accepted cash only. They lost their appointment slot and waited two more weeks. Always call ahead about payment methods.
A St. Paul applicant failed twice online, then switched to in-person testing. Their residency document had expired. Plymouth DVS turned them away, forcing a three-week wait for a new appointment after document renewal.
Pre-apply online to avoid document errors. Arrive before the queue cutoff. Know that a touchscreen freeze during the test is a legitimate technical issue, flag staff before it affects your score.
The expired document trap catches many test-takers. Check expiration dates on everything before leaving home.
"The AI mock tests were surprisingly realistic. The explanations for road signs helped me understand the logic, not just memorize. Passed my permit test on the first try!"
Michael R.
New Driver
"I was struggling with the specific road rules of my state until I used Shoro. The flashcards are a game changer for quick revision before the actual exam."
Sarah L.
Permit Holder
"The readiness score gives you so much confidence. I knew exactly when I was ready to take the test. Highly recommend Shoro for anyone nervous about their exam."
David K.
G2 Candidate