Illinois Doubles and Triples Test
You'll need to know how to handle 28-foot pups on I-80's tight curves near the Indiana border.
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Get ready for the doubles and triples endorsement. Use this free Illinois practice test to spot your weak areas fast.
Key Topics
- •Coupling & uncoupling steps
- •Off-tracking in tight spaces
- •Braking distances with extra trailers
About the Illinois Doubles and Triples Test
Topics Covered
- ✓Coupling and uncoupling – critical on Illinois's busy interstates where you'll often hook up doubles in tight terminal lots.
- ✓Safe speed and following distance – snow and slush on I-80 demand extra space between your trailers and the car in front.
- ✓Off-tracking and turning – you'll need to swing wide for narrow ramps at Illinois weigh stations.
- + 3 more topics
📘 Study Tips & State Info
Start with the Illinois CDL handbook's doubles and triples chapter. It's short but dense. Make flash cards for the pre-trip inspection steps — the DMV will ask you to name each part of the converter dolly. Focus on the air brake section too. Many drivers fail because they mix up the service and emergency lines.
Take this practice test at least three times. Review every question you miss. Then read the handbook again for those topics. On test day, schedule your appointment at a Secretary of State facility that offers CDL endorsements. Arrive early. Bring your current CDL, medical card, and the endorsement fee — it's $10 in Illinois.
You take the Doubles and Triples knowledge test at any Illinois Secretary of State facility that handles CDL endorsements. Popular locations include the Chicago North CDL facility, Springfield, and Joliet. You'll need to schedule an appointment online through the Illinois DMV site. Walk-ins aren't guaranteed, so book ahead.
The test costs $10 for the endorsement. You'll pay it when you take the knowledge test. If you also need the air brakes or combination vehicle endorsement, you can take those at the same visit — just pay separate fees. The written test has 20 questions. You need 16 correct to pass (80%). Illinois lets you retake it the same day if you fail, but you'll pay the $10 fee again.
After you pass, the endorsement goes on your CDL immediately. You don't need a separate road test for doubles and triples unless you're also upgrading your class of license. Keep your medical certificate current — the state checks it at renewal.
About the Illinois Doubles and Triples Test
Illinois moves a lot of freight on its interstates. Doubles and triples are common on I-80, I-55, and I-57, especially near the Joliet railyards and the Chicago intermodal terminals. You'll share the road with tens of thousands of other big rigs. That's why the state's endorsement test focuses heavily on safe coupling, braking distances, and off-tracking.
Weather doesn't make it easy. Illinois winters bring ice, snow, and gusts that can push a set of doubles sideways. The Illinois Secretary of State expects you to know how to adjust your speed and following distance for these conditions. You'll also need to remember that triples are illegal on some state roads — the test covers those restrictions.
Grain haulers and livestock carriers often pull doubles on rural routes. You might hook up a set of 28-foot trailers at a farm supply co-op in central Illinois. The test asks you about converter dollies, air line hookups, and the proper way to inspect the pintle hook. Don't skip those sections.
This practice test pulls questions straight from the Illinois CDL handbook. Each question mirrors the style you'll see at the DMV. Take it a few times. You'll build the confidence you need to pass on your first try.
Topics Covered
Study Tips
Start with the Illinois CDL handbook's doubles and triples chapter. It's short but dense. Make flash cards for the pre-trip inspection steps — the DMV will ask you to name each part of the converter dolly. Focus on the air brake section too. Many drivers fail because they mix up the service and emergency lines.
Take this practice test at least three times. Review every question you miss. Then read the handbook again for those topics. On test day, schedule your appointment at a Secretary of State facility that offers CDL endorsements. Arrive early. Bring your current CDL, medical card, and the endorsement fee — it's $10 in Illinois.
Illinois Specific Information
You take the Doubles and Triples knowledge test at any Illinois Secretary of State facility that handles CDL endorsements. Popular locations include the Chicago North CDL facility, Springfield, and Joliet. You'll need to schedule an appointment online through the Illinois DMV site. Walk-ins aren't guaranteed, so book ahead.
The test costs $10 for the endorsement. You'll pay it when you take the knowledge test. If you also need the air brakes or combination vehicle endorsement, you can take those at the same visit — just pay separate fees. The written test has 20 questions. You need 16 correct to pass (80%). Illinois lets you retake it the same day if you fail, but you'll pay the $10 fee again.
After you pass, the endorsement goes on your CDL immediately. You don't need a separate road test for doubles and triples unless you're also upgrading your class of license. Keep your medical certificate current — the state checks it at renewal.