Skip to main content
🍁 Saskatchewan · SGI Class 5 Knowledge Test

SGI Class 5 Practice Test — Saskatchewan Learner Knowledge Prep

Free online practice for the SGI Class 5 learner's knowledge test. Realistic 25-question mock exams, road sign drills and a wrong-answer review system — all built from the public SGI Driver's Handbook so you walk into your SGI issuer ready to pass on your first try.

Independent practice resource — not affiliated with or endorsed by SGI or the Government of Saskatchewan.

Saskatchewan Driver Licensing Overview

Class 5 Learner

Written-only stage. Minimum age 15 with parental consent, otherwise 16. Zero alcohol, supervised driving only, held at least 9 months (6 with approved Driver Education) before the road test.

Novice 1

First 12 months after passing the road test. Zero alcohol, supervised night driving, passenger limit equal to working seatbelts in the front seat.

Novice 2 → Experienced

Next 12 months with reduced restrictions. After two clean GDL years, you graduate to an Experienced Class 5 with full driving privileges.

Knowledge Test Format

The SGI Class 5 knowledge test is a 25-question multiple-choice exam written at any SGI issuer. You must answer at least 20 questions correctly to pass — that's 80%. The test covers two main areas:

Road signs

Regulatory, warning, construction and guide signs you'll see on Saskatchewan roads.

Rules of the road

Right of way, speed limits, GDL restrictions, school zones, parking and safe driving habits.

Pass mark: 20 / 25 (80%) · Vision screen: on the spot · Rewrite wait: short waiting period between attempts

Why practice with TEST PREP

Saskatchewan-specific bank

Practice questions based on the public SGI Driver's Handbook — Saskatchewan speed limits, GDL stages and prairie-specific hazards.

Unlimited mock exams

Take as many full 25-question SGI-style mock exams as you want — no daily caps.

Progress tracking

See category-level mastery for road signs and rules of the road so you know when you're ready for SGI.

Wrong-answer review

Every SGI question you miss is re-queued so you only spend time on what you don't already know.

Saskatchewan driving courses

7

Saskatchewan Class 7 Learner Knowledge Test

Official-aligned Saskatchewan Class 7 learner practice with mock exam.

Start Practice

Road signs on the SGI knowledge test

Regulatory signs

Stop, yield, speed limit, do-not-enter and turn restriction signs you must obey by law on Saskatchewan roads.

Warning signs

Yellow diamond signs warning of curves, intersections, school zones, deer crossings and changing road conditions.

Construction & work-zone signs

Orange work-zone signs covering lane closures, flag persons, reduced speeds and detours on Saskatchewan highways.

Guide & information signs

Green and blue signs for highway exits, services, parking and tourist information.

Rules of the road for Saskatchewan drivers

Right of way

Uncontrolled intersections, four-way stops, roundabouts, merging traffic and yielding to emergency vehicles.

Speed limits

Default Saskatchewan limits: 50 km/h in cities, 80 km/h on rural roads and 110 km/h on most divided highways.

School & playground zones

Reduced 30 km/h limits, when they apply, and increased fines for speeding in them.

GDL Novice 1 & Novice 2 restrictions

Zero alcohol, supervised night driving in Novice 1, passenger limits and learning-driver signs.

Winter driving

Black ice, blowing snow, white-outs on prairie highways and dealing with large grain trucks.

Rural & wildlife driving

Deer and moose on Saskatchewan highways, gravel roads, dust and slow-moving farm equipment.

Saskatchewan / SGI driving test FAQ

How many questions are on the SGI Class 5 knowledge test?

The Saskatchewan SGI Class 5 learner's knowledge test has 25 multiple-choice questions split between road signs and rules of the road. You must answer at least 20 of 25 correctly (80%) to pass.

What's the difference between Class 5 Learner, Novice 1 and Novice 2 in Saskatchewan?

Class 5 Learner is the written-only stage (minimum age 15 with parental consent, otherwise 16). Novice 1 begins after passing the road test and lasts 12 months with zero alcohol, supervised at night and a passenger limit. Novice 2 lasts another 12 months with reduced restrictions before a full Class 5 licence.

How much does the SGI knowledge test cost?

The SGI Class 5 knowledge test is bundled with the SGI Driver's Handbook fee. The licence-related fees and the test rewrite fee are published on the SGI website and change occasionally — confirm current rates before booking.

Can I take the Saskatchewan knowledge test in languages other than English?

Yes. SGI offers the Class 5 knowledge test in several languages at most issuers, including English, French, Spanish, Chinese and Punjabi. Availability varies by issuer — confirm before booking.

How long do I have to hold the Class 5 Learner permit before the road test?

Nine months as a Learner if you are under 19 (or six months if you complete an approved Driver Education course).

What documents do I need to bring to an SGI issuer?

Bring identity documents that prove your legal name, date of birth and Saskatchewan residency — for example a passport plus a utility bill, or a Canadian birth certificate plus secondary government-issued ID. Bring glasses or contacts if you need them for the vision screen.

How many times can I retake the SGI knowledge test?

There is no hard limit, but each rewrite has a separate fee and a short waiting period between attempts. We recommend running full mock exams until you consistently score 23+ out of 25 before rebooking.

Is this affiliated with SGI or the Government of Saskatchewan?

No. This is an independent practice resource based on the public SGI Driver's Handbook study topics. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by SGI or the Government of Saskatchewan.

Explore driving tests in other provinces

Practice for the official knowledge test in every Canadian province and territory.

View the full Canadian driving tests hub →

This website is an independent driving test preparation platform and is not affiliated with ICBC or any provincial licensing authority.