Teens under 18 must log 30 supervised driving hours of supervised driving, including 10 at night. Adults 18+ face no state-mandated practice requirements.
Arizona's Graduated Driver Licensing program sets different requirements based on age. The rules exist because teen crash rates drop significantly with structured practice. Highway driving, city traffic, and nighttime sessions all count. Parking lot practice and driving school simulator time do not count. Each session must include a licensed supervisor over 21.
Teens under 18:
Adults 18 and older:
Taking an approved driver education course cuts teen requirements to 20 total hours, with only 6 required at night. Honestly, skipping driver's ed to save money rarely works out, most teens who do end up needing more practice anyway.
Yes, if you're under 18. You must submit a completed Driving Practice Certificate signed by a parent or guardian. Adults don't need any documentation. The ADOT Form 40-5144 driving log is mandatory for applicants under 18. Your examiner reviews it at the road test. Missing, unsigned, or incomplete entries invalidate the hours recorded.
The state uses Form 96-0223 as the official log. Digital apps can track your hours, but final totals must go on this paper form.
Signing at home and bringing it in gets rejected. Every time. The MVD agent needs to witness the signature or verify notarization.
Not all driving time qualifies toward your required hours. The MVD has specific rules about what counts. Any drive on a public road with a qualifying 21+ supervisor counts. Parking lot sessions, simulator time, and driving school classrooms do not count. Each valid session must be logged with a signature.
| Counts Toward Hours | Does NOT Count |
|---|---|
| Supervised driving with a licensed adult 21+ in front seat | Driving with only another permit holder present |
| Behind-the-wheel instruction from a certified instructor | Private parking lot practice without a supervisor |
| Nighttime driving (after sunset) with a supervisor | Time spent as a passenger watching someone else drive |
Driver's ed behind-the-wheel hours absolutely count. Completing a certified course means you only need 20 practice hours instead of 30.
The MVD checks Form 96-0223 but relies on the certified signature. They don't audit individual entries unless fraud is suspected. Your road test examiner reviews Form 40-5144 at check-in before the test. They verify total hours, nighttime hours, supervisor signatures, and date ranges. Incomplete or unsigned entries cancel the test.
Forgot to log some sessions? You can estimate retroactively, but be accurate. Falsifying the log is perjury under Arizona law, your permit gets revoked.
A teen in Mesa showed up at the Southern Avenue MVD with Form 96-0223 signed at home. The agent refused it on the spot. The family had to get the form notarized and reschedule the road test two weeks later.
Another situation in Tucson: a parent estimated 35 hours retroactively but only logged 7 night hours. The MVD agent at Grant Road caught the deficiency. The teen had to complete 3 more nighttime sessions before testing.
One driver used a tracking app but wrote the night hour total wrong on the paper form. The discrepancy caused a 20-minute delay at a Glendale Third Party office while the supervisor manually recalculated everything.
Beyond logging practice hours, preparation prevents test-day disasters. Most failures happen before the driving even starts. Tucson and Flagstaff offices historically have higher road test pass rates than metro Phoenix locations. This is attributed to lower traffic complexity on standard test routes, not easier examiners.
Check the specific vehicle requirements for your road test before scheduling.
After passing the road test, Class G license holders under 18 face driving restrictions for 6 months. These rules exist because crash data shows new teen drivers have the highest risk during their first months of solo driving.
Violating these restrictions results in fines and potential license suspension. After 6 months with a clean record, all restrictions lift automatically.
"The AI mock tests were surprisingly realistic. The explanations for road signs helped me understand the logic, not just memorize. Passed my permit test on the first try!"
Michael R.
New Driver
"I was struggling with the specific road rules of my state until I used Shoro. The flashcards are a game changer for quick revision before the actual exam."
Sarah L.
Permit Holder
"The readiness score gives you so much confidence. I knew exactly when I was ready to take the test. Highly recommend Shoro for anyone nervous about their exam."
David K.
G2 Candidate