Will the Subject One Exam Include Local City Questions?
2 Answers
The exam question bank follows a nationally standardized version, so there is no such thing as local city-specific questions. Subject One Exam Content: Basic knowledge of motor vehicles; laws, regulations, and road traffic signals; fundamentals of safe driving and civilized driving; basic knowledge related to motor vehicle driving operations. Subject One Exam Process: Follow the instructions of the staff and collect your driving training file in order at the waiting area; Bring and present your ID card for verification by the supervising officer; Mobile phones must be turned off upon entering the exam area; No loud talking is allowed in the exam area; Regulation textbooks are not allowed in the exam area (or must be placed in your bag); After the exam, keep your ID card safe and submit the file to the at the front of the exam room; Candidates who pass the exam should sign under the guidance of the staff at the exit before leaving; Candidates who fail the exam may leave the exam area and await further instructions from their driving school regarding the retake schedule.
I just passed the subject one test not long ago, and the instructor did mention that there are some local questions in the question bank. For example, Beijing has questions related to local license plates, Shanghai tests the restricted hours for out-of-town plates, and Guangzhou has questions about the 'four days on, four days off' policy. However, 90% of the questions are from the national unified question bank. When you practice, just focus on the 'local regulations' section. During my test, I encountered three questions about Beijing's traffic restrictions, all of which I had seen while practicing. The driving school app you sign up with will automatically match you with your local question bank, and cramming for two days before the test is completely sufficient. As for how many local questions you'll get, it depends on your local arrangements, but the number is not large. The key is to read the questions carefully and not get confused.