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Washington DMV Road Test: The Full Bring-This List

You’ve got your Washington road test scheduled. Good. Now don’t blow it by forgetting a document. Every year, people show up to the DMV ready to drive and get sent home because they’re missing a form, a signature, or a piece of ID. This list covers everything.

The checklist

Print this. Check it twice before you leave the house.

  • Valid learner’s permit (not expired)
  • Proof of identity: birth certificate or US passport
  • Social Security card or proof of SSN
  • Proof of residency (2 documents: utility bill, bank statement, etc.)
  • Completed driving log showing 50 supervised hours
  • Parent or guardian signature on the log (if under 18)
  • Driver’s ed completion certificate
  • Vehicle registration for the car you’re testing in
  • Proof of insurance (current, not expired)
  • Glasses or contacts (if your permit has a corrective lens restriction)
  • Road test appointment confirmation
  • Payment for the license fee

The driving log: 50 hours

Washington requires 50 supervised driving hours before you can take the road test. Your log needs to show 40 daytime hours and 10 night hours, each with the date, start and end time, and your supervisor’s signature.

Hand-written logs with crossed-out entries and smudged ink don’t inspire confidence. A clean, printed log moves things along faster.

The vehicle

The car you bring is part of the test. Before the driving portion starts, the examiner does a quick vehicle check. They’ll look at headlights, brake lights, turn signals, horn, mirrors, and tires. If something doesn’t work, you won’t test that day.

Make sure the registration and insurance are current. Not “expired last week.” Current. Bring the physical cards, not just a photo on your phone (some locations don’t accept digital copies). And clean out the backseat. The examiner needs to sit back there.

Mistakes that get people turned away

The front desk sends people home for these constantly:

  • Not having two separate residency documents (one isn’t enough)
  • Using an out-of-state learner’s permit that hasn’t been transferred
  • Showing up without an appointment (most states require one now)
  • Forgetting a parent signature on the driving log

Driver’s ed certificate

Washington requires driver education. Bring your completion certificate or card. If you took the course online, print the certificate, don’t just have it in your email. The DMV needs a physical or printed copy.

Skip the paper log headache

Moda tracks every practice session and builds your Washington driving log automatically. Dates, times, day vs. night classification, supervisor info. Export a clean PDF when it’s time for the DMV. Done.

View all Washington permit hour requirements


Track your permit hours the easy way.