Tennessee Pre-Trip Inspection Test
We built this test around real Tennessee routes — think I-40's steep grades near Monteagle Mountain.
Select Test Mode
You need to pass the pre-trip inspection to earn your CDL. This test covers the key points Tennessee examiners check.
Key Topics
- •Brake systems
- •Lights & reflectors
- •Tires and wheels
About the Tennessee Pre-Trip Inspection Test
Topics Covered
- ✓Brake systems — critical on steep Tennessee grade descents like I-40 near Rockwood.
- ✓Lights and reflectors — fog in East Tennessee valleys demands bright, working lights.
- ✓Tires and wheels — summer heat on I-65 can cause blowouts if tread is low.
- + 3 more topics
📘 Study Tips & State Info
Start with the Tennessee CDL Handbook. The state publishes a specific checklist for the pre-trip inspection. Memorize it. Your examiner expects you to name each item, show it, and explain why it's safe. Don't just point — touch every component.
Practice at home with your own truck or a friend's. Set a timer for 30 minutes. Go through the entire checklist out loud. That builds muscle memory. Focus on the brake section — air brake checks trip up more Tennessee drivers than anything else.
On test day, arrive early. The examiner watches your approach. If you walk around the truck like you've done it a hundred times, they trust you. Tennessee examiners respect drivers who treat the inspection like a real safety check, not just a test.
Tennessee offers CDL skills testing at multiple locations: Nashville (Berry Hill), Memphis, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Jackson, and smaller offices. You must schedule an appointment online through the Tennessee DMV portal. Walk-ins aren't accepted. Appointments can book out two to three weeks, so plan ahead.
The pre-trip inspection test fee is $50. You'll need a valid Tennessee CDL permit and a vehicle that passes a basic safety check before the test. Bring your permit, vehicle registration, and insurance. The vehicle must have valid Tennessee tags. No temporary permits allowed.
If you fail the pre-trip, you can retest after 14 days. You're allowed two retakes before you have to reapply. The Tennessee DMV also offers a separate air brake endorsement test if your vehicle has air brakes. That's a short oral check added to the pre-trip.
About the Tennessee Pre-Trip Inspection Test
Tennessee's highways don't give you any slack. I-40 cuts through the Cumberland Plateau, I-24 snakes over Monteagle, and I-65 pushes through heavy Nashville traffic. Your pre-trip inspection has to catch problems before they turn into disasters on these roads. This practice test matches the exact checklist Tennessee examiners use.
Weather here changes fast. Summer heat bakes your tires. Winter ice coats your mirrors. Fog in the Tennessee Valley cuts visibility. Your inspection needs to handle all of it. We built this test to show you what matters most for Tennessee's mix of mountains, flatlands, and city congestion.
You'll see questions about brake systems, lights, tires, and coupling devices — the same categories the Tennessee DMV checks. Each question explains why that item matters for drivers crossing the Volunteer State. Use this test to find weak spots before you walk out to the lot with your examiner.
Topics Covered
Study Tips
Start with the Tennessee CDL Handbook. The state publishes a specific checklist for the pre-trip inspection. Memorize it. Your examiner expects you to name each item, show it, and explain why it's safe. Don't just point — touch every component.
Practice at home with your own truck or a friend's. Set a timer for 30 minutes. Go through the entire checklist out loud. That builds muscle memory. Focus on the brake section — air brake checks trip up more Tennessee drivers than anything else.
On test day, arrive early. The examiner watches your approach. If you walk around the truck like you've done it a hundred times, they trust you. Tennessee examiners respect drivers who treat the inspection like a real safety check, not just a test.
Tennessee Specific Information
Tennessee offers CDL skills testing at multiple locations: Nashville (Berry Hill), Memphis, Knoxville, Chattanooga, Jackson, and smaller offices. You must schedule an appointment online through the Tennessee DMV portal. Walk-ins aren't accepted. Appointments can book out two to three weeks, so plan ahead.
The pre-trip inspection test fee is $50. You'll need a valid Tennessee CDL permit and a vehicle that passes a basic safety check before the test. Bring your permit, vehicle registration, and insurance. The vehicle must have valid Tennessee tags. No temporary permits allowed.
If you fail the pre-trip, you can retest after 14 days. You're allowed two retakes before you have to reapply. The Tennessee DMV also offers a separate air brake endorsement test if your vehicle has air brakes. That's a short oral check added to the pre-trip.