Memorize shape and color first
Most road-sign questions on the Missouri permit test give you the shape, the color, or a description of the sign instead of an image. If you've memorized the shape-and-color = meaning mapping below, you can answer those questions without needing to see the sign at all.
Regulatory
Stop sign
Octagon · Red and white
Come to a complete stop behind the stop line, yield to pedestrians and cross traffic, then proceed when safe.
Regulatory
Yield sign
Inverted triangle · Red and white
Slow down, prepare to stop, and give the right of way to vehicles and pedestrians already in or about to enter the intersection.
Regulatory
Speed limit
Vertical rectangle · Black on white
Maximum speed legally allowed under ideal conditions. Reduce in rain, fog, snow, or heavy traffic.
Regulatory
Do not enter / Wrong way
Vertical rectangle · Red on white
Never enter the road in this direction; one-way street or off-ramp coming the other way.
Warning
General warning
Diamond · Yellow and black
Hazard ahead — curve, hill, narrow road, slippery surface, or animal crossing. Slow down and be alert.
Warning
School zone / school crossing
Pentagon · Yellow-green
School or school crosswalk ahead. Watch for children and obey reduced school-zone speed limits when posted.
Warning
Railroad crossing advance warning
Round · Yellow and black
Railroad tracks ahead. Slow down, look both ways, and prepare to stop if a train is approaching.
Regulatory
Railroad crossbuck
Crossbuck (X-shape) · White and black
Yield to all approaching trains. If lights flash or gates lower, stop at least 15 feet from the nearest rail.
Construction
Work zone warning
Diamond · Orange and black
Construction or maintenance work ahead. Reduce speed, watch for workers, and obey flaggers.
Guide
Highway guide sign
Horizontal rectangle · Green and white
Direction, distance, and exit information for upcoming destinations. Plan lane changes early.
Service
Motorist services
Horizontal rectangle · Blue and white
Hospital, food, fuel, lodging, or rest area available at the next exit.
Guide
Recreation / cultural
Horizontal rectangle · Brown and white
Public park, historic site, or recreational area at or near the next exit.
The shape-color cheat sheet
Strip everything else away and these are the patterns the test always rewards:
- Octagon always means stop. There is only one octagonal road sign in the United States.
- Inverted triangle always means yield. Same — only one sign uses this shape.
- Diamond yellow means warning of a hazard ahead (curve, hill, animals, slippery road).
- Diamond orange means construction or work-zone warning. Slow down and watch for workers.
- Pentagon yellow-green means school zone or school crossing. Reduce speed when children are present.
- Pennant (sideways triangle) on the left side of the road means "no passing zone."
- Round yellow with a black X and "RR" means a railroad crossing is ahead.
- Crossbuck (white X) at the tracks themselves is a yield sign — you must yield to all trains.
- Vertical rectangle, white with black is regulatory (speed limit, lane use, parking).
- Vertical rectangle, white with red is a prohibition (Do Not Enter, Wrong Way, One Way).
- Horizontal rectangle, green is a guide sign — direction, distance, exit information.
- Horizontal rectangle, blue is motorist services (gas, food, lodging, hospital).
- Horizontal rectangle, brown is recreation or cultural sites.
Practice signs questions
The Missouri permit-test bank has dozens of questions on signs and signals. Drill them in order, or jump straight into the timed practice quiz.
Official sign references
- Federal MUTCD — the master document every state DMV draws from.
- Missouri Driver Handbook — chapter on signs and signals usually appears in the first third of the handbook.