CDL Practice Tests for Michigan
If you are pursuing a Commercial Driver's License in Michigan, the first stop is the Michigan Department of State (visit the official site). The agency will issue your commercial learner's permit, schedule your knowledge and skills tests, and ultimately issue your CDL. CDL Prep Hub provides free practice questions for every knowledge exam administered in Michigan, including the federal core tests and every endorsement.
Practice tests available for Michigan applicants
General Knowledge
The mandatory test every CDL applicant must pass: vehicle inspection, control, signaling, hazards, and safe operation.
Practice now →Air Brakes
Required for any vehicle equipped with air brakes — covers compressors, governors, slack adjusters, and emergency systems.
Practice now →Combination Vehicles
Class A endorsement test: coupling, fifth wheels, glad hands, off-tracking, and pulling tractor-trailers.
Practice now →Hazardous Materials (Hazmat)
Required to carry placardable hazardous materials — paperwork, placards, segregation, routing, emergencies.
Practice now →Tank Vehicles
Required for liquid or gas tanks of 1,000 gallons or more — surge, baffles, outage, and rollover prevention.
Practice now →Doubles / Triples
Required to pull more than one trailer — converter dollies, pintle hooks, and crack-the-whip control.
Practice now →Passenger Transport
Required for buses and other vehicles designed to carry 16 or more passengers, including the driver.
Practice now →School Bus
Required to drive a school bus — danger zones, loading/unloading, and student management.
Practice now →How CDL licensing works in Michigan
The Michigan Department of State follows the federal Commercial Driver's License Standards published by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. As in every state, you will need to pass a written knowledge exam (or several, depending on the endorsements you want), hold a Commercial Learner's Permit for at least 14 days while practicing under supervision, complete entry-level driver training from a registered training provider if you are a new applicant, and pass a road skills test in the class of vehicle you will drive.
Most Michigan applicants will need at least three exams: General Knowledge, Air Brakes (because nearly every commercial truck has air brakes), and the Combination Vehicles test if pursuing a Class A license. School bus drivers add the Passenger and School Bus exams; bulk-fuel haulers add Tank Vehicle and Hazardous Materials; team drivers pulling LTL freight in multi-trailer combinations add the Doubles/Triples test. Each test pulls questions from the AAMVA bank on this site.
What to bring to the testing site
The Michigan Department of State requires proof of identity (a state driver's license or REAL ID-compliant document), proof of Michigan residency (a utility bill, lease, or vehicle registration, typically), proof of Social Security Number, and a valid Department of Transportation medical examination certificate from a certified medical examiner on the National Registry. Bring payment for the testing and licensing fees in the form your local office accepts (cash, check, or card — fees vary). For the hazardous materials endorsement you must also be fingerprinted and pass a TSA Security Threat Assessment, which can be arranged through the TSA-approved enrollment provider in Michigan.
Studying for your Michigan CDL exam
The most reliable route to a first-attempt pass is to combine three resources: the official Michigan CDL handbook (free from the Michigan Department of State), behind-the-wheel practice with an experienced commercial driver, and a comprehensive question bank like the one on CDL Prep Hub. Read the handbook chapter that corresponds to the test you're studying, then come back to this site and work through every question in that category. Aim to score above 90% on the practice bank before scheduling the real exam.
After you pass
Once you pass your knowledge tests in Michigan, you will receive a Commercial Learner's Permit. You must hold the permit for at least 14 days before taking the skills test, during which time you may operate a commercial vehicle only with a CDL holder of the same or higher class seated next to you. After successfully completing the three-part skills test (vehicle inspection, basic control, and on-road driving), the Michigan Department of State will issue your full CDL — typically valid for four to eight years depending on your age and category.