Alberta Driver's Licence
Class 7 Knowledge Test — 30 questions, 25 correct (~83%) to pass
공식 시험 제공 언어: English, French, Chinese, Spanish, Vietnamese, Punjabi, Arabic, Farsi, Hindi, Urdu, Tagalog, Russian, Ukrainian, Portuguese, German, Somali, Thai, Amharic, Dutch, Cree
📋 준비물
- ✓
Proof of identity
Identification accepted by an Alberta registry agent (e.g. passport, permanent resident card, birth certificate)
- ✓
Test / licensing fee
Pay the knowledge-test and licensing fees at a registry agent office
- ✓
Glasses or contact lenses
Bring them if you need them — a vision screening is done before the test
📅 예약 방법
- 1
Study the guide and practice
Read Alberta's Driver's Guide and take practice tests covering signs, traffic control, rules of the road, and safe driving.
- 2
Go to a registry agent office
You must be at least 14 for a Class 7 learner's licence. Bring your ID and fee; the electronic knowledge test is offered in 25 languages.
- 3
Pass the vision and knowledge tests
Pass a vision screening, then the 30-question knowledge test (25 to pass). When you pass, you get your Class 7 learner's licence and enter the Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL) program.
💡 시험 당일 팁
- •The Alberta Class 7 knowledge test has 30 questions; you must get 25 correct (about 83%) to pass.
- •You can get a Class 7 learner's licence at age 14. As a Class 7 learner and a Class 5-GDL (probationary) driver, your blood-alcohol and drug level must be zero.
- •A Class 7 learner must be supervised by a fully licensed (Class 5 or higher) driver at least 18 years old in the front passenger seat, and may not drive between midnight and 5 a.m.
- •You must hold the Class 7 learner's licence for at least 1 year before taking the basic road test for a Class 5-GDL licence.
- •Unless a sign says otherwise, the speed limit is 50 km/h in cities/towns and 80 km/h on other roads; school and playground zones are 30 km/h during posted hours.
📚 운전자 안내서
모든 연습 문제는 아래 단원을 기반으로 합니다. 단원을 클릭하면 DMV 공식 웹사이트에서 원문을 읽을 수 있습니다.
🎯 주제별 연습
Licensing Information
Alberta driver licence classes, the Graduated Driver Licensing (GDL) program — Class 7 learner and Class 5-GDL probationary stages — demerit points, identification, and fees.
Traffic Control
The shapes, colours and meanings of Alberta traffic signs, traffic signals, lane-use control, and pavement markings every driver must recognize and obey.
The Basics of Driving
Getting ready to drive, starting and stopping, steering, speed and lane positioning, following distance, backing up, and parking in Alberta.
Intersections and Turns
Right-of-way rules, controlled and uncontrolled intersections, left and right turns, roundabouts, and yielding in Alberta.
Highways and Freeways
Merging, passing, high-speed driving, lane discipline, and exiting safely on Alberta highways and freeways.
Emergency Situations and Challenging Conditions
Handling skids, brake and tire failures, collisions and breakdowns, plus driving in rain, snow, ice, fog, and other challenging conditions in Alberta.
Responsible Driving
Proactive driving: scanning and hazard awareness, keeping a space cushion and safe following distance (the two- and four-second rules), managing distraction and cell-phone use, securing passengers and child seats, fuel-efficient driving and fuelling safety in Alberta.
Sharing the Road
Sharing the road with pedestrians, cyclists, motorcycles, large trucks, buses and school buses, emergency vehicles, trains, and animals in Alberta.
Driving within the Law
Alberta's demerit-point system and suspensions, the Immediate Roadside Sanctions (IRS) program, impaired-driving penalties, insurance, and collision responsibilities.
Towing a Trailer
The basics of towing a trailer with a Class 5 licence: registration and plates, trailer lights, safety chains, brake requirements by weight, mirrors, off-tracking, and backing.