100+ Free Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice Practice Questions
Pass your Puerto Rico DTOP/CESCO Road Signs, Traffic Signals, and Pavement Markings Practice exam on the first try — instant access, no signup required.
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Key Facts: Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice Exam
100
Practice questions in this Puerto Rico road signs bank
Open Exam Prep
$14
CESCO-listed stamps/receipt total for non-Real-ID learner permit and virtual exam eligibility
CESCO
$50
DTOP/CESCO review fine listed for traffic-sign violations
DTOP/CESCO Law 22 review
15 mph
Urban school-zone maximum speed listed in the DTOP/CESCO review
DTOP/CESCO Law 22 review
Spanish
Official language for Puerto Rico traffic-control device messages unless DTOP approves otherwise
ACT
Use this 100-question bank to study Puerto Rico signs, traffic signals, and pavement markings before the DTOP/CESCO learner permit knowledge test. Focus on PARE, CEDA, NO ENTRE, warning sign shapes, school zones, railroad crossings, work zones, lane-control signals, yellow and white pavement lines, double yellow no-passing zones, stop lines, crosswalks, and Puerto Rico-specific signal review rules. DTOP/CESCO treats signs as part of the broader learner permit theory exam rather than a separate official signs-only exam.
Sample Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice Practice Questions
Try these sample questions to test your Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice exam readiness. Each question includes a detailed explanation. Start the interactive quiz above for the full 100+ question experience with AI tutoring.
1On Puerto Rico roads, what must you do at a red octagonal sign that says PARE?
2What does a red and white downward-pointing triangle mean?
3What is the usual meaning of a yellow diamond-shaped sign?
4Which color is used for temporary construction and maintenance warning signs?
5A white rectangular SPEED LIMIT sign with black lettering is what type of sign?
6What does a steady red traffic light require?
7What does a steady yellow traffic light tell you?
8What does a steady green traffic light generally mean?
9A round yellow sign with a black X and the letters RR warns of what?
10At a railroad crossbuck sign, what should a driver do?
About the Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice Exam
This practice set drills the road signs, traffic signals, lane-control signals, pavement markings, railroad controls, school-zone signs, pedestrian warnings, and work-zone controls that appear in the Puerto Rico learner permit study materials. It is framed as targeted preparation for the signs, signals, and markings portion of the DTOP/CESCO knowledge test, not as a separate official road-signs-only exam. Questions use the DTOP/CESCO Law 22 review, the ACT Manual de Senales de Transito, and Puerto Rico's adopted MUTCD guidance as source material.
Assessment
This is a road signs, traffic signals, and pavement markings practice set for the Puerto Rico learner permit knowledge test. DTOP/CESCO does not publish this as a separate official road-signs-only exam.
Time Limit
No separate official signs-only time limit is published; timing belongs to the broader learner permit theory exam.
Passing Score
No separate official signs-only passing score is published; use this bank to prepare for the signs, signals, and markings content in the broader learner permit test.
Exam Fee
No separate official road signs exam fee; CESCO lists $11 + $1 internal revenue stamps and a $2 Trauma Center receipt for the non-Real-ID learner permit and virtual exam eligibility. (Puerto Rico Department of Transportation and Public Works (DTOP) / CESCO)
Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice Exam Content Outline
Sign Shapes and Colors
Recognize PARE, CEDA, NO ENTRE, warning, regulatory, guide, service, school, railroad, work-zone, and prohibition signs by shape, color, symbol, and Spanish legend
Regulatory and Warning Signs
Apply speed limit, no turn, no U-turn, one-way, keep right, no-passing, curve, hill, divided highway, confluence, road narrows, slippery-road, pedestrian, bicycle, and school-zone signs
Traffic Signals and Lane-Control Signals
Use steady red, yellow, and green signals; flashing red and yellow signals; red and green arrows; flashing yellow arrows; red X lane closures; and green downward lane arrows
Pavement Markings
Understand yellow center lines, white lane lines, double yellow no-passing zones, stop lines, crosswalks, lane-use arrows, solid and broken lines, edge lines, and parking-related markings
Railroad, School, Pedestrian, and Work Zones
Review railroad advance warnings and crossbucks, multiple-track crossings, school-zone speeds, pedestrian crossings, bicycle warnings, orange work-zone signs, flaggers, lane closures, and detours
How to Pass the Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice Exam
What You Need to Know
- Passing score: No separate official signs-only passing score is published; use this bank to prepare for the signs, signals, and markings content in the broader learner permit test.
- Assessment: This is a road signs, traffic signals, and pavement markings practice set for the Puerto Rico learner permit knowledge test. DTOP/CESCO does not publish this as a separate official road-signs-only exam.
- Time limit: No separate official signs-only time limit is published; timing belongs to the broader learner permit theory exam.
- Exam fee: No separate official road signs exam fee; CESCO lists $11 + $1 internal revenue stamps and a $2 Trauma Center receipt for the non-Real-ID learner permit and virtual exam eligibility.
Keys to Passing
- Complete 500+ practice questions
- Score 80%+ consistently before scheduling
- Focus on highest-weighted sections
- Use our AI tutor for tough concepts
Puerto Rico Road Signs Practice Study Tips from Top Performers
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this a separate official Puerto Rico road signs exam?
No. This is a practice bank for the signs, traffic signals, and pavement-markings portion of the broader DTOP/CESCO learner permit knowledge test. DTOP/CESCO publishes learner permit and virtual learner exam services, but it does not publish a separate official road-signs-only exam for regular applicants.
Which official Puerto Rico sources should I study first?
Start with the DTOP/CESCO Repaso de la Ley de Vehiculos y Transito de Puerto Rico and the CESCO learner permit appointment requirements. For sign design and recognition, use ACT's Manual de Senales de Transito and ACT's page explaining Puerto Rico's adoption of MUTCD traffic-control guidance.
What Spanish sign words should I know for Puerto Rico?
Know common legends such as PARE for stop, CEDA for yield, NO ENTRE for do not enter, and UNA VIA for one way. ACT notes that Spanish is the official language for traffic-control device messages in Puerto Rico unless the DTOP Secretary approves another language.
What pavement markings are most important for the permit test?
Memorize that yellow center lines separate traffic moving in opposite directions and white lines separate lanes moving in the same direction. The DTOP/CESCO review also emphasizes double yellow as a no-passing zone, with only a cautious left-turn exception.
What traffic signals should I study for Puerto Rico?
Study steady red, yellow, and green signals; flashing red and flashing yellow signals; red and green arrows; lane-control red X and green downward arrows; and the Puerto Rico review rule that vehicles facing red between 12:00 a.m. and 5:00 a.m. must stop before continuing with due precautions when allowed.
How much does the Puerto Rico road signs portion cost?
There is no separate official road signs portion fee. CESCO lists the learner permit process and virtual exam eligibility with $11 and $1 internal revenue stamps plus a $2 Trauma Center receipt for non-Real-ID learner permit services.