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Alaska Supervised Driving Hours: Complete 2026 Guide

Alaska requires 40 hours of supervised driving before you can get your license. 10 of those must be at night, leaving 30 daytime hours. That’s not a suggestion. The DMV won’t schedule your road test without a completed driving log.

Alaska permit requirements at a glance

RequirementDetails
Total supervised hours40
Daytime hours30
Night hours10
Minimum permit age14
Minimum hold period6 months
Supervisor minimum age21
Driver education requiredNo

Night driving rules in Alaska

In Alaska, night driving counts from sunset to sunrise. The hours shift with the seasons. In December, sunset might be as early as 4:30 PM. In June, it could be past 8:30 PM. That seasonal swing matters — winter is actually the easier time to knock out night hours because darkness comes early.

Plan to start your evening sessions about 30 minutes before sunset. That way you get comfortable in fading light before it goes fully dark. 10 hours sounds like a lot, but at 1-2 sessions per week you’ll be done within a couple months.

Supervisor requirements

Your supervising driver must be at least 21 and hold a valid license.

They need to sit in the front passenger seat, stay alert, and be ready to grab the wheel if needed. No scrolling, no napping, no backseat supervising. If you get pulled over and your supervisor doesn’t meet the requirements, that session might not count — and you could both get a citation.

Good to know

Night hours include inclement weather driving.

How to plan your 40 hours

You have a 6-month hold period in Alaska. If you spread your hours evenly, that’s about 2 hours a week. Totally doable.

Here’s what a realistic schedule looks like:

TimelineSessions per weekSession lengthTotal time
Relaxed (20 weeks)21 hour~20 weeks
Moderate (10 weeks)3-41 hour~10 weeks
Aggressive (7 weeks)5-61 hour~7 weeks

Most families land somewhere in the moderate range. The key is consistency. Two sessions a week for six months beats cramming 10 hours into a single weekend. You learn more, retain more, and your supervisor won’t burn out.

Night hours are 25% of your total. Don’t save them all for the end. Mix in one evening session per week from the start and you’ll have them done well before the rest of your hours.

How Alaska compares to other states

Alaska’s 40-hour requirement puts it right around the middle of the pack. The most common requirement across all states is 50 hours (30 states use it).

Neighboring comparison: Virginia requires 45 hours — 5 more than Alaska. Connecticut requires the same 40 hours.

See all state requirements for a complete comparison.

Tracking your driving hours

Paper driving logs are a pain. You forget to fill them in, lose the sheet, or can’t remember if last Tuesday’s session was 45 minutes or an hour. Moda handles it. Hit start when you get in the car, hit stop when you’re done. It tracks the time, categorizes day and night automatically, and keeps a running total of your progress against Alaska’s requirements.

See how close you are to finishing with the hours calculator.

How many supervised driving hours does Alaska require?

Alaska requires 40 total supervised driving hours. 10 must be at night and 30 during the day.

What counts as night driving in Alaska?

Night driving in Alaska is defined as sunset to sunrise (varies by season and location). You need 10 hours of night driving to qualify for your license.

How long do I need to hold my permit in Alaska?

You must hold your learner’s permit for at least 6 months in Alaska before you can take your road test.

How old do you have to be to get a learner’s permit in Alaska?

You can apply for a learner’s permit in Alaska at age 14.

Who can supervise a permit driver in Alaska?

Your supervising driver must be at least 21 years old with a valid license.

Does Alaska accept a digital driving log?

Most DMV offices accept printed driving logs. Moda generates a PDF in Alaska’s required format that you can print and bring to your road test appointment.

How long does it take to finish 40 driving hours?

At 2-3 sessions per week, most families finish in 14 to 20 weeks. Some move faster with daily sessions, but spreading practice out leads to better skill retention.


Calculate your remaining hours

Enter the hours you've already completed to see what's left.


Stop manually tracking hours. Moda logs driving automatically.

Auto-detects night driving, exports DMV forms, and syncs across family phones.