Every topic on the DPS motorcycle knowledge test, organized so you can study one section at a time.
The Texas motorcycle knowledge test is built from the official Texas Motorcycle Operator Training Manual (2020-2021). Score 16 of 20 correct (80%) to pass. The guide below walks through the 12 core topics the test draws from. Tap any section to expand it, then use the practice test to check what you have learned.
Before every ride, be able to find and operate the throttle, clutch, front brake lever, rear brake pedal, gearshift, turn signals, horn, headlight switch, and engine cut-off switch without looking for them. A motorcycle needs more frequent attention than a car, so use the T-CLOCS routine before every ride (manual p.11-12, 42).
In Texas a FMVSS-218 helmet is required for operators and passengers; riders 21 or older are exempt only with an approved training course or qualifying medical insurance (manual p.3). Without a helmet you are five times more likely to suffer a critical head injury, and helmeted riders are three times more likely to survive head injuries (manual p.5, 8).
Sit so your arms steer the motorcycle rather than hold you up, keep your knees against the tank and your feet firmly on the footrests, and start with your right wrist flat to avoid using too much throttle (manual p.14). Your motorcycle has two brakes — always use both at the same time. The front brake supplies at least 70% of your stopping power and is safe when you squeeze, never grab, the lever (manual p.15).
Riders crash by taking curves too fast, then running wide or braking too hard. Use four steps: SLOW, LOOK, PRESS, ROLL (manual p.16-17). Slow before the turn, look through the turn to where you want to go, press the handgrip in the direction of the turn to lean — press left, lean left, go left — and roll on the throttle through the turn to keep the motorcycle stable.
Each lane gives a motorcycle three paths of travel — left, center and right. There is no single best position, and no part of the lane, including the center, needs to be avoided (manual p.18). Choose the path that helps you see and be seen, avoids blind spots and surface hazards, and protects your lane. Keep at least a two-second following distance, and open it to three seconds or more in heavy traffic, on slippery roads, or when you cannot see ahead (manual p.19).
Experienced riders use SEE — Search, Evaluate, Execute — a three-step process for spotting hazards and acting early (manual p.23). Search aggressively ahead, to the sides and behind before hazards arise. Evaluate how surfaces, traffic-control devices and other road users could create risk. Execute your decision by communicating with lights or horn, adjusting your speed, and adjusting your position.
Intersections are the most likely place for a crash — over half of motorcycle/car crashes are caused by drivers entering a rider's right-of-way, usually a car turning left in front of you (manual p.24). Drivers often say they never saw the motorcycle. Keep your headlight on — a motorcycle with its light on is twice as likely to be noticed — wear bright or reflective clothing, and use your turn signals every time, even when your move seems obvious (manual p.27-28).
When you find yourself in a tight spot, two skills save you: stopping quickly and swerving. To stop quickly, apply both brakes at the same time, squeezing the front lever firmly and progressively — never grabbing it (manual p.30). When there is no room to stop, swerve: press the handgrip on the side of your escape direction to lean the motorcycle quickly, then press the opposite grip to recover (manual p.31).
Wet pavement, gravel, mud, snow, ice, lane markings and metal plates all reduce traction. Slow down before you reach a slippery surface, avoid sudden moves, and use both brakes gently (manual p.33-34). When it starts to rain, ride in the tire tracks left by cars and avoid the oily center strip until surface oil washes away (manual p.34).
Checking your motorcycle before every ride catches trouble before you reach traffic (manual p.12). If a problem happens on the road, stay calm and account for traffic and surface conditions. If a tire goes flat, hold the grips firmly, ease off the throttle, keep a straight course, and edge to the side of the road (manual p.36).
Only experienced riders should carry passengers or large loads, because the extra weight changes how the motorcycle handles, balances and stops (manual p.38). A passenger needs a permanent seat, footrests and handholds; they should get on after you start the engine, hold your waist, hips or belt, keep their feet on the pegs, and lean with you (manual p.3, 39). Keep cargo low, forward, evenly distributed and securely fastened (manual p.41).
Alcohol and other drugs degrade your ability to think clearly and ride safely more than any other factor — as little as one drink affects performance, and impairment begins well below the legal limit (manual p.45-46). In Texas a rider with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08% or more is legally intoxicated, and alcohol leaves the body at only about one drink per hour (manual p.46-47).
Source: Test details reflect the consensus of major rider-education sources — confirm with the state agency before your visit. Majority third-party consensus is 20 questions / 80%. Texas is unusual: a TDLR-approved Motorcycle Operator Training Course is required of every applicant, and completing it waives the Class M knowledge (written) test. The written test is required by statute only for applicants restricted to operating a moped.