Maine General Knowledge CDL study guide
A focused study guide for Maine drivers preparing for the General Knowledge knowledge exam administered by the Maine BMV. Read this before drilling the practice test.
About this exam in Maine
The General Knowledge knowledge exam is required for any Maine CDL applicant who will operate a vehicle covered by this endorsement. The Maine BMV administers the test using federal content from the FMCSA CDL Manual, with the same 80% passing standard adopted nationwide. The exam typically contains 50 multiple-choice questions, and you may take it as part of your initial Commercial Learner’s Permit application or as an upgrade after you already hold a CDL.
The General Knowledge exam is required for every Class A, B, and C CDL applicant. It covers vehicle inspection, basic control, shifting, backing, communicating with other drivers, distracted driving, fatigue, hazard perception, emergency maneuvers, skid control, accident procedures, hazardous materials awareness, and federal hours-of-service rules.
Maine's BMV requires CDL applicants to pass road testing through state examiners or approved third-party testers. Logging and pulp transport create heavy demand for CDLs in northern and western Maine.
Topics you must master
The federal source material breaks the General Knowledge exam into the following major topic areas. Each link below opens a deep-dive article on that topic with its own examples, key terms, and exam-style discussion. Read them in order; they are sequenced from the most foundational to the most exam-focused.
- Pre-Trip Inspection — A systematic seven-step pre-trip walk-around to catch defects before they put you and the public at risk.
- Basic Vehicle Control — Backing, turning, and low-speed maneuvering safely with a vehicle whose blind spots are larger than most cars are long.
- Hazard Perception — Reading the road, recognizing developing problems, and acting before they become emergencies.
- Emergency Maneuvers — Braking, steering, and skid control when something goes wrong.
- Hours of Service — The federal limits on driving and on-duty time, and the records that prove you complied.
How to use this study path
The most effective preparation pattern for the General Knowledge exam in Maine follows three loops. Loop one: read each subtopic article above end-to-end. Do not pause to drill questions yet; build the conceptual map first. Loop two: take the Maine General Knowledge practice test cold to find your weak spots. Loop three: re-read the subtopic articles you missed questions from, then re-take the practice test. Repeat loop three until you score 90% or higher on three consecutive runs.
For Maine applicants specifically, supplement these articles with the official Maine CDL handbook chapter on General Knowledge. The handbook will use the exact wording your Maine BMV examiner sees on the test screen, which can make the difference on questions where two answer choices are technically correct but only one matches the manual’s preferred phrasing.
Exam-day logistics in Maine
Bring proof of identity, proof of Maine residency, your Social Security number, your current driver’s license, and your Medical Examiner’s Certificate if you are pursuing non-excepted interstate operation. The base CDL fee in Maine is approximately $34; endorsement fees are extra. Allow at least two hours at the Maine BMV office. Most Maine CDL test offices recommend or require an appointment; check the agency website before you go.