Community Corner

Passing Your Driver’s Test: How Hard It Is In North Carolina

Getting a driver's license may be harder than you think in North Carolina. Here's what's required and how we stack up with other states.

Handing the car keys to the kid is a frightening rite of passage for parents no matter where they live, but some states are more rigorous than others in driver’s license tests. North Carolina ranked No. 32 in terms of overall difficulty.

The study by the personal injury law firm Siegfried & Jensen reviews the variations in the minimum knowledge states require on written tests, how drivers are judged in road tests, whether applicants over 18 are required to get learner permits, and the cost of licenses and tests. Each area was weighted, with 100 possible points.

Here’s what the study showed about North Carolina:

Find out what's happening in Charlottefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

It’s harder to get a driver’s license in North Carolina than much of the country, according to the study. Drivers over the age of 18 don’t have to get a learner’s permit, license fees are only $5 and applicants can take three passes at the test, which requires 80 percent proficiency. Driver tests concentrate on 16 elements, and the state’s overall score was 63, compared with 80 points for Washington State.

Joining Washington among the top five states with difficult driver licensing standards are Massachusetts, Maryland, South Carolina and Kansas, respectively. On the other end, South Dakota, Ohio, New York, Arkansas and Colorado were the top states with the easiest standards.

Find out what's happening in Charlottefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The study used information from driver handbooks issued by each state’s Department of Motor Vehicles or equivalent agency and from comparison websites Driving-Tests.org and DMV.org. The study’s authors said the information about licensing, driving tests, and associated requirements was collected on the assumption the applicant is 18 years old and doesn’t have any mitigating circumstances, such as a veteran status or disability.

Read more about the methodology here.

(For more news like this, find your local Patch here. If you have an iPhone, click here to get the free Patch iPhone app; download the free Patch Android app here.)

Photo via Shutterstock

Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.