The wording, decoded.

Free exam-style Thai theory test questions in English, grouped by what foreigners actually search for. Pick a topic, try the samples, then continue inside Practice mode.

Mascot studying on the floor in a cozy Thai apartment with afternoon light coming through louvered shutters.

Mascot at a small laptop with a generic abstract multiple-choice layout on screen, finger resting at the chin in a thoughtful 'decoding' pose.

How FarangDrive helps

Stop translating. Start spotting.

Every question shows what the Thai theory test is actually testing. Exact distances, exception clauses, the difference between “allowed” and “allowed except.” A few practice rounds and the trap patterns start to feel obvious.

FAQ

What people ask about the questions.

  • The standard private car or motorcycle theory test is a computer-based multiple-choice exam with 50 questions. Public-service guidance lists 45 correct answers as the pass mark, so treat 45/50 as the line to clear.
  • Yes. The Thai DLT theory test is computer-based multiple choice — usually four answer options per question, with a single correct answer. There are no written or short-answer sections.
  • Expect road signs, traffic rules, right-of-way, parking and following distances, overtaking, hazard situations, and vehicle-category details such as motorcycle rules when you book a motorcycle slot. FarangDrive groups practice questions around those recurring areas so you can drill the topics you keep missing.
  • No — and nobody can sell you those. The official question bank isn't public. FarangDrive uses realistic exam-style questions based on common test topics and public guidance, with the wording decoded.
  • They match the public format: computer-based multiple choice, four options, and the same broad topic areas. The exact official question bank is not public, so nobody can sell you the real questions. What FarangDrive offers is realistic exam-style practice built on common test topics and public guidance, with the wording traps explained.
  • English test wording often follows Thai legal and exam phrasing closely, so distance phrases, exception clauses, and right-of-way wording can feel literal. Practising exam-style English in advance helps because the same trap patterns repeat.
  • It depends on your driving background and English comfort. Many foreign-licence candidates use FarangDrive as a focused one- or two-day review: run the diagnostic, practise weak topics, scan the cheat sheet, then take a timed test. If traffic-rule vocabulary is new to you, leave more time.

Ready to find your weak topics?

The diagnostic flags your weak topics in 5 minutes. Then you only practise the ones you'd otherwise lose points on.

Mascot raising one fist in celebration while holding a phone showing weak-topic markers.