Road signs meaning guide
Common DMV Road Signs and What They Mean
Use this visual glossary to study road sign shape, color, meaning, and the safe action a driver should take. It is written for permit-test prep, not as an official DMV manual.
Warning signs
Warning Sign
- Meaning
- A yellow diamond sign warns that a condition, crossing, curve, or hazard is ahead.
- Driver action
- Slow down, scan ahead, and be ready to adjust speed or lane position.
- Watch for
- Do not treat warning signs as optional; they tell you to prepare before the hazard appears.
Regulatory signs
Stop Sign
- Meaning
- A red octagon means every driver must make a complete stop before proceeding.
- Driver action
- Stop at the stop line, crosswalk, or before the intersection, then yield before moving.
- Watch for
- Rolling slowly through a stop sign is not a complete stop.
Regulatory signs
Yield Sign
- Meaning
- A yield sign means give the right-of-way to traffic or pedestrians already in the conflict area.
- Driver action
- Slow down and stop if needed. Proceed only when the path is clear.
- Watch for
- Yield does not always require a full stop, but it does require safe gap judgment.
Regulatory signs
Speed Limit Sign
- Meaning
- A black-and-white rectangular sign gives a rule drivers must follow, such as a speed limit.
- Driver action
- Obey the posted limit and reduce speed further when traffic, weather, or road conditions require it.
- Watch for
- The posted limit is a maximum under good conditions, not a target in poor conditions.
Regulatory signs
No Turn or Prohibited Movement
- Meaning
- A red circle and slash means the shown movement or action is not allowed.
- Driver action
- Avoid the prohibited turn, U-turn, entry, or maneuver shown on the sign.
- Watch for
- Look closely at the symbol inside the slash; the rule depends on the movement shown.
Warning and regulatory signs
No Passing Zone
- Meaning
- A pennant-shaped sign marks the start of a no-passing zone.
- Driver action
- Stay in your lane and wait until passing is legally and safely allowed again.
- Watch for
- No-passing signs often appear before hills, curves, or limited-visibility areas.
Construction signs
Work Zone Sign
- Meaning
- An orange sign warns about temporary construction, maintenance, lane changes, or workers ahead.
- Driver action
- Slow down, leave extra space, and follow flaggers, cones, arrows, or temporary lane markings.
- Watch for
- Work-zone rules can override normal traffic patterns for a short area.
School and pedestrian signs
School Crossing Sign
- Meaning
- A fluorescent yellow-green sign warns that children may be crossing near a school area.
- Driver action
- Slow down, watch both sides of the road, and be ready to stop.
- Watch for
- Children can be unpredictable, especially near buses, parked cars, and crosswalks.
Pedestrian signs
Pedestrian Crossing Sign
- Meaning
- A pedestrian crossing sign warns that people may be walking across the roadway.
- Driver action
- Reduce speed and yield to pedestrians in or approaching the crosswalk when required.
- Watch for
- Do not pass another vehicle stopped at a crosswalk.
Railroad signs
Railroad Crossing Warning
- Meaning
- A round yellow sign warns that a railroad crossing is ahead.
- Driver action
- Slow down, look both ways, listen, and be ready to stop before the tracks.
- Watch for
- Never stop on railroad tracks, even in slow traffic.
Warning signs
Merge Sign
- Meaning
- A merge sign means traffic streams will join and drivers need to adjust position.
- Driver action
- Check mirrors and blind spots, match speed when safe, and leave room for merging traffic.
- Watch for
- Do not assume the other driver will create the gap; communicate with speed and spacing.
Warning signs
Curve Ahead Sign
- Meaning
- A curve sign warns that the road bends ahead and may require a lower speed.
- Driver action
- Slow before the curve, stay in your lane, and avoid hard braking inside the turn.
- Watch for
- Curves become riskier in rain, snow, darkness, or heavy traffic.
Warning signs
Divided Highway Sign
- Meaning
- A divided-highway sign warns that opposing traffic is separated by a median or barrier.
- Driver action
- Stay to the correct side and watch for changes in lane layout.
- Watch for
- A similar symbol may also warn when a divided highway ends.
Regulatory signs
Lane Use Control
- Meaning
- Lane-use signs show which movements are allowed from each lane.
- Driver action
- Choose the correct lane early and follow the arrow direction for that lane.
- Watch for
- Changing lanes late near an intersection can create conflicts and missed turns.
Warning signs
Slippery When Wet
- Meaning
- This sign warns that the road surface may become slippery, especially when wet.
- Driver action
- Slow down, increase following distance, and brake gently.
- Watch for
- Hydroplaning risk rises when speed is too high for water on the road.
Warning signs
Animal Crossing
- Meaning
- An animal crossing sign warns that animals may enter or cross the roadway.
- Driver action
- Scan the shoulder areas and slow down when visibility is limited.
- Watch for
- Animals may travel in groups, so watch for more than one.
Regulatory signs
Wrong Way Sign
- Meaning
- A wrong way sign means you are entering or traveling against the permitted direction of traffic.
- Driver action
- Stop safely, do not continue, and turn around only when it is safe and legal.
- Watch for
- Wrong-way signs are common near freeway ramps and one-way streets.
Guide signs
Guide or Exit Sign
- Meaning
- Green guide signs point drivers toward exits, routes, destinations, and directions.
- Driver action
- Read early, choose the proper lane in advance, and avoid sudden lane changes.
- Watch for
- Guide signs help navigation, but they do not replace traffic-control signs.
Service signs
Service Sign
- Meaning
- Blue signs identify services such as hospitals, fuel, food, lodging, or assistance.
- Driver action
- Use these signs for route planning while keeping attention on traffic and lane position.
- Watch for
- Service signs are informational; they do not usually require a traffic action by themselves.
Road Sign Study Questions
What road signs should I study first?
Start with stop, yield, warning, speed limit, no passing, railroad, school, pedestrian, work-zone, guide, wrong-way, merge, slippery road, and divided-highway signs.
Is shape or color more important?
Both matter. Shape and color help you recognize the sign quickly, but the safest driver action is what matters most on a permit test.
Is this an official DMV sign manual?
No. US Permit Prep is independent and not affiliated with any DMV or government agency. Use your official state driver handbook as the final source.