Mistake 1: Confusing residential and highway speed limits
Default residential speed in Texas is 25 mph unless signs say otherwise. The top posted highway speed in Texas is around 85 mph on rural interstates. Test takers often pick "55 mph" out of habit because that is a common older limit, but Texas's top number is 85. Memorize both numbers and you knock out an easy category of points.
Mistake 2: Ignoring the under-21 alcohol rule
Many teens taking the Texas test know the adult blood alcohol limit is 0.08% and choose that answer for any alcohol question. Texas actually applies a zero-tolerance rule to drivers under 21: any measurable amount of alcohol can result in license suspension. On the test, the right answer is usually the lowest non-zero option, not 0.08%.
Mistake 3: Reversing right of way at four-way stops
When two cars arrive at a four-way stop at the same time in Texas, the car on the right has the right of way. Test takers often pick "the car on the left" because they confuse this rule with the give-way-to-the-left rule used in some other countries. In the U.S., yield to the right, every time.
Mistake 4: Underestimating school bus rules
On an undivided Texas road, traffic in both directions must stop for a school bus with flashing red lights. Many teens think only the cars behind the bus need to stop. The exception, on a divided highway with a physical median, is that only same-direction traffic must stop, but the test rarely asks about the divided-highway case.
Mistake 5: Cramming the night before
The most expensive mistake is studying everything on one night and showing up tired. Texas permit test items are written to test understanding, not memorization, and a tired brain reads "not" as "now" and answers the wrong question. Spread your study across at least a week, and on test day get a full night's sleep instead of a final cram session.
How to fix all five at once
Drill one topic at a time using the Texas category pages, write down the five state-specific numbers (top speed, residential limit, GDL minimum age, parallel parking distance, turn signal distance) on a notecard, read each question twice on the real test, and never pick "always" or "never" answers without checking the wording. Doing all five reliably eliminates the bulk of incorrect answers we see in Texas practice tests.