Introduction
Getting a Texas learner’s permit is your first real step from passenger to driver, and the process is designed to make you confident and safe before you drive solo. You’ll complete a slice of driver education, gather the right paperwork, pass a knowledge and vision test, and leave with a permit that lets you practice on real roads with an experienced adult beside you.
Texas uses a graduated driver licensing system for teens, which moves you through two phases: the learner license for supervised practice and then the provisional license for limited unsupervised driving. That structure exists to reduce risk while you build real-world skills, especially in your first months behind the wheel.
For the permit itself, teens must be at least 15, complete a portion of an approved driver-ed course, and show school enrollment or a diploma/GED, among other standard identity and residency proofs. You’ll apply at a driver license office, provide biometrics, take or show proof of a passed knowledge exam, and complete a vision screening. The permit comes with important restrictions: a licensed adult aged 21+ must sit in the front passenger seat, and cell-phone use is prohibited for minors—even hands-free—except in emergencies.
Fees are modest for under-18 permits, and your temporary paper permit is issued right away so you can begin practicing legally the same day. Your plastic card typically arrives by mail within a few weeks. Hold the permit for at least six months before you’re eligible for the next phase, unless you turn 18 sooner. Along the way, you’ll finish classroom and behind-the-wheel training, log required practice hours, and—just before your eventual road test—complete the state’s Impact Texas Drivers video module. That Impact certificate is not for the permit but for the driving test later on.
If you’re an adult beginner, Texas lets you practice legally too. Many adults choose to obtain a restricted/learner-type credential so they can train with a licensed driver before the road test; the state’s third-party testing program expects adult applicants to hold a valid restricted driver license when testing with a participating school.
1) What are the requirements for a Texas learner’s license?
For teens, eligibility is straightforward. You must be between 15 and 17, complete the required classroom hours of an approved driver-education course, and show either a high-school diploma/GED or current enrollment through a VOE form. You’ll also need to pass a knowledge exam and a vision screening.
Application day is checklist-driven. Bring your completed driver license application, proof of identity, proof of lawful presence (if applicable), proof of Texas residency, Social Security number, and your driver-education certificate showing the appropriate classroom completion. You’ll provide biometrics and have your photo taken at the office.
Once issued, your learner license lets you practice only with a licensed adult age 21+ in the front passenger seat, and minors may not use a cell phone while driving, including hands-free, except for emergencies. The permit must be held for at least six months unless you turn 18 first, and it expires on your 18th birthday.
2) How old do you have to be to get a Texas learner permit?
The minimum age for a teen learner license is 15. You can start driver-education classroom instruction as young as 14, but you cannot apply for the permit itself until you are at least 15 years old. That age line is part of Texas’ graduated driver license framework.
Because the permit is designed for supervised learning, the state pairs the age minimum with education milestones. You must complete the required initial classroom hours before the permit is issued, and a parent or guardian should accompany you to the driver license office to provide consent.
Once you’re permitted, every practice drive must include a licensed adult 21 or older in the front passenger seat. For minors, phone use while driving is prohibited—even if hands-free—which helps keep early practice focused entirely on the road.
3) What documents do you need for a Texas learner’s permit?
Arrive with a complete packet to avoid repeat trips. Bring your filled driver license application, proof of identity, proof of Texas residency, proof of U.S. citizenship or lawful presence (if applicable), and your Social Security number. Teens must also show a driver-education completion certificate for the required classroom hours.
Students under 18 provide either a high-school diploma/GED or a Verification of Enrollment (VOE) form from their school. The VOE confirms attendance and has a limited validity window, so time your visit accordingly. If you completed the knowledge exam within your driver-education course, bring proof; otherwise, you’ll take it at the office.
At the counter, you’ll give biometrics (thumbprints and signature), have your photo taken, pass a vision exam, and pay the fee. You’ll leave with a temporary paper permit that’s valid for practice right away while your card arrives by mail.
4) How much does a Texas learner’s permit cost?
For under-18 applicants, the fee for a learner license is $16, and it expires on your 18th birthday. This amount includes the required administrative fee and is set by the state’s fee schedule.
Keep in mind that other costs in your learning journey are separate. Driver-education tuition, third-party road-test fees (if you choose to test at an authorized school), and any replacement card fees are outside the basic learner-license fee. If you later add motorcycle privileges or take additional services, those have their own prices.
Budget for study materials and practice time, too. While many resources are free, planning ahead prevents cost surprises as you move from permit to provisional license.
5) Can you get a Texas permit through parent-taught driver education?
Yes. Texas permits several driver-education paths, including Parent-Taught Driver Education (PTDE), traditional schools, online providers, and some public-school programs. In PTDE, a qualified parent/guardian conducts the coursework and initial behind-the-wheel training using state-approved materials.
No matter the method, you must complete the required classroom portion before getting the permit. Your parent/guardian will issue you the state-recognized driver-education certificate once you’ve met those classroom requirements. You’ll bring that certificate to the driver license office as proof when you apply for your learner license.
The permit’s rules are the same regardless of how you learned: a licensed adult 21+ in the front passenger seat and no cell-phone use by minors while driving, except in emergencies. That uniformity keeps expectations and safety standards consistent across all education methods.
6) Do you need a VOE form to get a Texas learner’s permit?
If you’re under 18 and don’t already have a high-school diploma or GED, you’ll typically need a VOE—Verification of Enrollment and Attendance—from your school. It confirms you’re enrolled and attending and is part of Texas’ effort to tie driving privileges to education engagement.
The VOE has a shelf life: it is generally valid for 30 days from issuance, or 90 days if issued in the summer months (June–August). If you can’t obtain a VOE, there are limited alternatives—such as a summer report card or proof of current participation in a high-school equivalency preparation program—depending on timing and your situation.
Bring the VOE alongside your identity, residency, Social Security, and driver-ed documentation when you apply. Having everything in order streamlines your appointment and helps you leave with a temporary permit the same day.
7) How many driver-ed hours are required before the Texas permit?
Texas recognizes two timing models for the classroom portion. In the concurrent method, you may apply for your learner license after the first six classroom hours; in the block method, you complete 24 classroom hours before applying. Your chosen path determines when you’re eligible to visit the driver license office for the permit.
These thresholds apply only to the classroom portion needed for the permit itself. You’ll complete the rest of the classroom and behind-the-wheel training while you hold the permit, including observation and practice drives, before moving on to your provisional license. That staged approach is central to Texas’ safety-first design.
Whichever method you select, you’ll present the appropriate driver-education certificate at your appointment to prove classroom completion for permit eligibility. If your course included the knowledge exam, bring evidence so you don’t have to retake it at the office.
8) How long must you hold a Texas learner’s permit?
Teens must hold a valid learner license for at least six months before testing for their provisional license. If your learner license is suspended during that time, the six-month clock is extended by the number of suspended days to ensure a full six months of valid holding.
Your learner license also carries age-based timing. It expires on your 18th birthday, and if you turn 18 before the six-month mark, the minimum-holding rule no longer applies. Still, most new drivers benefit from the full practice period to build habits and confidence.
Use the permit months wisely: complete your remaining classroom and in-car requirements, log practice hours with a licensed adult 21+, and stay off the phone while driving. Those habits translate directly to safer solo driving after your road test.
9) Is the Impact Texas Drivers course required for a permit?
No—Impact Texas Drivers (ITD) is not a prerequisite for receiving the learner permit. ITD (ITTD for teens, ITAD for adults) is required just before your driving skills test. Your ITD completion certificate must be dated within the 90 days leading up to your road test appointment.
Practically, that means you’ll watch the ITD video after finishing driver-education and your behind-the-wheel training, and shortly before your scheduled road test—whether you’re testing at a state office or with a third-party skills testing provider. Keep that timing in mind so your certificate doesn’t expire before test day.
While ITD isn’t part of the permit step, its focus on distracted-driving prevention makes it worth previewing early. The lessons on attention and risk carry over to every supervised drive you take with your learner license.
10) Can adults get a learner or restricted permit in Texas?
Adult first-time drivers aren’t required to hold a teen learner license, but many obtain a restricted (B-restriction/LOFS 21) credential so they can legally practice with a licensed adult before the road test. Adult applicants who test through participating third-party schools are typically expected to hold a valid restricted driver license when they show up to test.
If you’re 18–24 and applying for a first license, Texas requires a six-hour adult driver-education course before testing; ages 25+ aren’t required to take driver ed, though it’s recommended. Regardless of age, you must complete the appropriate Impact Texas Drivers video within 90 days before your road test.
Adults who choose to practice under supervision can hold a restricted license carrying code B, which requires a Licensed Operator in Front Seat aged 21+. That restriction mirrors the supervision rule teens follow and gives adult beginners a safe, legal pathway to build skills before testing.