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Wathim

Royal Oman Police (ROP)

Oman Driving Theory Test

Free practice for the Oman driving theory and signals test (the computer-based knowledge test taken through the Royal Oman Police). Timed mock exams and topic tests with the answer and an explanation for every question, written from the public Oman traffic rules and the standard GCC road signs.

Choose your governorateAvailable in English, Arabic

11

Governorates

75%

Pass mark

23/30

25 min

Time limit

30

Questions

Choose your governorate

The theory test is run by each governorate’s own authority, so pick where you are testing. Every governorate gets its own branded practice with a distinct set of questions.

How to prepare in three steps

1

Pick your governorate

Choose where you are testing so the branding and questions match your licensing authority (RTA, ITC and more).

2

Drill and mock

Warm up by topic with instant feedback, then sit a full timed mock exam just like the real test.

3

Review and retake

Read the explanation for every miss, then retake until you clear the pass mark comfortably.

Licence process guide

How to get your Oman driving licence

In the Sultanate of Oman, driving licences for light vehicles (private cars) are issued by the Royal Oman Police (ROP) through its Directorate of Licensing (Traffic Department). There are two broad pathways: direct conversion for holders of licences from certain approved countries, and the full new-licence process for everyone else. Applicants who must take the full route (which includes many expatriate nationalities) typically complete a medical and eye test, open a licence file with the ROP, train with a licensed driving school or certified instructor, pass an oral signals and theory test, pass a set of stage-one practical tests (including parking and hill-start manoeuvres), and finally pass an on-road driving test before the licence is issued. The minimum age to hold a licence is generally 18. All procedures, fees, and eligibility criteria are set by the ROP and are subject to change; confirm the current requirements with the Royal Oman Police before beginning the process.

The step‑by‑step journey

  1. 1

    Complete the eye test and medical requirements

    Before opening a licence file you generally need a vision (eye) test from an ROP-authorised optician, and in many cases a blood group certificate from a licensed clinic. The eye test certificate is time-limited (reportedly valid for around 30 days), so obtain it shortly before your ROP visit. If you wear glasses or contact lenses, attend the test with them. Confirm the current medical and eye-test requirements, approved centres, and certificate validity period with the Royal Oman Police.

  2. 2

    Gather documents and obtain an NOC if required

    Assemble your passport, resident card (Civil ID), passport-sized photographs (commonly required with a blue background), the eye test certificate, and the blood group certificate. Expatriates employed under sponsorship are typically required to provide a No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the sponsor or employer; the NOC is generally required to be in Arabic and duly signed and stamped, and an English-only version may be rejected. Confirm whether an NOC applies to your visa category, and the current document list, with the Royal Oman Police.

  3. 3

    Open a licence file with the ROP (the licence booklet)

    Visit the ROP Directorate of Licensing / Traffic Department (or use the ROP mobile app or portal to book and reduce waiting time) to submit your documents, pay the file-opening fee, and receive your driving licence file, sometimes referred to as a booklet or 'green book'. This file records your test attempts and often contains the road-signs reference used in the signals test. Confirm the current file-opening procedure and fee with the Royal Oman Police.

  4. 4

    Train with a licensed driving school or certified instructor

    Register with an ROP-approved driving school or a certified independent instructor in your governorate to prepare for the theory and practical tests. Training should cover vehicle control, mirror and signal use, roundabout navigation (very common in Oman), parking, hill starts, and public-road driving. The number of lessons needed varies by individual; confirm any minimum training requirements and current lesson rates with the Royal Oman Police and directly with driving schools, as fees vary.

  5. 5

    Pass the signals and theory test

    The signals test is administered by an ROP officer at a Traffic Department / licensing centre and focuses on recognising Omani road signs and traffic rules. It is reported to be conducted largely orally (the officer points to signs and asks you to identify them) and to require a high pass mark. It is primarily conducted in Arabic, though English and other languages may be available at some centres; availability varies. Confirm the current format, number of questions, pass mark, language options, and retake rules with the Royal Oman Police.

  6. 6

    Pass the stage-one practical tests (signs, parking, hill start)

    After the theory stage, applicants typically complete a set of practical sub-tests in a controlled area, commonly including: a brief repeat sign check; a parking/manoeuvring test through a course marked by drums or cones that must not be touched (including a reversing element that many find the hardest); and a slope or hill-start test requiring a smooth uphill start without rolling back. Confirm the current stage-one test components, marking criteria, and fees with the Royal Oman Police.

  7. 7

    Pass the on-road driving test

    The final road test is conducted on public roads with an ROP examiner in the vehicle. It assesses mirror use, speed control, lane discipline, full stops at stop signs, correct and safe roundabout entry, following distance, and parking. Multiple attempts are common, and there is typically a waiting period of several weeks between attempts. Confirm current retake waiting periods and any caps on attempts with the Royal Oman Police.

  8. 8

    Collect the driving licence

    On passing the road test, pay the licence issuance fee and the ROP issues the Omani light-vehicle driving licence, increasingly delivered digitally through the ROP mobile app with physical cards available from self-service kiosks or police service centres. Licence validity differs for nationals and non-nationals and may be tied to residency; confirm the current validity period, issuance fee, and renewal process with the Royal Oman Police. Carry your licence whenever driving.

What to bring: documents checklist

  • Valid Resident Card (Civil ID) for expatriate residents, or national ID for Omani nationals (original and copy)
  • Original passport (and copy)
  • Recent passport-sized photographs (a blue background is commonly required; confirm count and specification with the ROP or your driving school)
  • Eye test certificate from an ROP-authorised optician (time-limited validity, reportedly around 30 days)
  • Blood group certificate from a licensed clinic (where required)
  • No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the sponsor or employer, generally in Arabic, signed and stamped, if required for your visa category
  • The ROP-issued licence file or booklet (green book) once opened
  • Valid or recently expired foreign driving licence, plus translation if not in Arabic or English, for conversion applicants
  • Payment receipts for applicable fees

Each stage in detail

Eye test

A vision (eye) test from an optician authorised by the Royal Oman Police is a mandatory prerequisite before opening a licence file and sitting the tests. It checks that your visual acuity meets the minimum standard for safe driving, with corrective lenses noted if you wear them; that condition will then appear on your licence. The eye test certificate has a limited validity period (reported to be around 30 days), so obtain it shortly before your ROP visit to avoid it expiring. Many applicants also need a blood group certificate from a licensed clinic as part of the file. Confirm the current vision standards, certificate validity, and list of approved centres with the Royal Oman Police.

Theory (knowledge) test

The theory test, commonly called the signals test, is administered by a Royal Oman Police officer at a Traffic Department / licensing centre and focuses on identifying Omani road signs and knowing the rules of the road. It is reported to be conducted largely as an oral examination in which the officer points to signs and the candidate names them, with a relatively high pass mark required, and there is generally a limited time to complete it. The test is primarily conducted in Arabic; English and possibly other languages may be available at some centres, but availability varies and is subject to change. The exact number of questions, the pass mark, the languages offered, and the rules and waiting periods for retakes are all set by the ROP; confirm the current details with the Royal Oman Police. Road-signs study material is typically provided in the licence booklet or by your driving school. Booking is usually done through your driving school, the ROP mobile app, or the ROP portal.

Road test

The final practical road test is conducted on real public roads with a Royal Oman Police examiner in the vehicle. It assesses safe vehicle control, mirror and blind-spot checks, appropriate and steady speed, lane discipline, coming to full stops at stop signs, correct and safe roundabout entry (Oman has a very large number of roundabouts and this is a frequent focus), safe following distance, and parking. Commonly reported reasons for failure include: touching or crossing yellow edge lines, rolling rather than fully stopping at stop signs, entering a roundabout when lanes to the left are not clear, harsh or late braking, not checking mirrors before changing lanes, excessive or erratic speed, and poor parking. Many candidates, including experienced drivers, take several attempts, and there is typically a waiting period of several weeks between attempts. Note also the earlier stage-one practical tests (a parking/manoeuvring course marked by drums and a hill-start slope test) that generally precede the on-road test. Confirm the current assessment criteria, retake waiting periods, and any caps on attempts with the Royal Oman Police.

Converting a foreign licence

Holders of a valid driving licence from certain approved countries may be able to convert directly to an Omani licence without sitting the tests. Countries reportedly on the approved list have historically included the GCC states (Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar) and a range of others such as the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Africa, and several European countries; however, the approved-country list is determined by the Royal Oman Police and is subject to change. Nationalities not on the list (which has historically included India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, the Philippines, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and others) generally must complete the full new-licence process. The typical conversion process for eligible applicants involves obtaining an eye test (and blood group certificate where required), presenting the original foreign licence (with translation if not in Arabic or English, and often required to have been held for at least a period such as one year), passport, resident card, and photographs at the ROP or via the ROP app, and paying the conversion fee, with the licence often issued quickly. Visitors' foreign or international licences are typically accepted only for a limited period after arrival before conversion or a local licence is required. Confirm whether your country of issue qualifies, the holding-period requirement, and the current process with the Royal Oman Police.

How to book

The Royal Oman Police offers services through its official portal (rop.gov.om) and through the ROP mobile application, which is available on the Apple App Store and Google Play and supports appointment booking, fee payment, and digital licence issuance. Using the app or portal to book appointments can significantly reduce in-person waiting times, which can otherwise run to a few hours at busy centres. In practice you should: (1) obtain your eye test and any required medical certificate first; (2) open your licence file at the ROP Directorate of Licensing / Traffic Department (bookable via the app); (3) register with an ROP-approved driving school, which can help coordinate test bookings; and (4) check rop.gov.om and the ROP app for the latest self-service options and the current list of approved schools. Confirm current booking procedures with the Royal Oman Police, as digital services are updated periodically.

Fees

The full new-licence process involves several separate fees: the eye test, a blood group certificate where required, the licence file (green book) opening fee, the signals/theory test fee (per attempt), stage-one practical test fees (per attempt), the road test fee (per attempt), the licence issuance fee, and separately the cost of driving-school lessons. Because retakes are common and lesson needs vary, total cost varies widely between applicants. Individual government fee components are commonly reported in the range of a few Omani rials each for tests and certificates, with the licence issuance fee typically higher, and driving-school training often being the largest single cost. Conversion of an eligible foreign licence is generally much cheaper than the full process. All figures reported in third-party and community sources may be out of date, so no exact amounts are asserted here; confirm the current fee schedule for each stage directly with the Royal Oman Police and your chosen driving school before committing.

Typical timeline

Timeframes vary greatly. Direct conversion of an eligible foreign licence is often completed within a day or a few days once documents are ready. The full new-licence process is considerably longer because of training time, test scheduling, and the common need for retakes: with waiting periods of several weeks between practical-test attempts and multiple road-test attempts being common, the full process frequently takes several months and can extend to a year or more for some applicants. These timeframes are indicative only; confirm current waiting times for each test and for processing with the Royal Oman Police and your driving school.

Tips to pass

  • Book appointments through the ROP mobile app or rop.gov.om rather than walking in, as in-person queues at busy licensing centres can take a few hours.
  • Obtain the eye test (and blood group certificate) before your ROP visit, and act quickly, as the eye test certificate is only valid for a short window (reportedly around 30 days).
  • If an NOC is required for your visa category, ensure it is in Arabic, signed, and stamped, since an English-only NOC may be rejected; arrange it early as employer processing times vary.
  • Practice roundabout entry extensively and only enter when the lanes to your left are clear, as incorrect roundabout behaviour is one of the most common road-test failure points.
  • For the stage-one practical tests, rehearse the reversing/parking manoeuvre through drums and the hill-start on a slope, as these controlled-area tests catch out many first-time applicants.
  • Do not book the road test until you are genuinely confident; rescheduling after a failed attempt can add several weeks, and keep copies of all receipts and certificates for every stage.

Passing the Oman theory test

The Oman theory (knowledge) test is 30 multiple-choice questions with a 75% pass mark, so you need 23 correct answers. It is administered by each governorate’s own authority, so where you test matters. Start with road signs and signals, then move on to right of way, roundabouts, speed limits and penalties, and finish with full timed mock exams so the 25-minute format feels familiar on the day.

Every question here comes with the correct answer and a short explanation drawn from the public traffic rules, so you learn the reasoning rather than memorising answers. Pick your governorate above to get practice matched to your licensing authority.

Oman theory test FAQs

The Oman light-vehicle theory test has 30 multiple-choice questions and you need 23 correct to pass, which is 75%. You get about 25 minutes to complete it. The question count and pass mark can vary by governorate and by vehicle class, so confirm the details with your governorate's authority.

You need 75% to pass, which is 23 of 30 questions correct. Our free mock exams score you against the same 75% pass mark so you always know where you stand before the real test.

The Oman theory test is commonly available in English and Arabic. Exact language and interpretation options are set by the licensing authority, so confirm what is offered at your test centre when you book.

The theory test is run by each governorate's own authority: Muscat (Royal Oman Police), Dhofar (Royal Oman Police), Musandam (Royal Oman Police), Al Buraimi (Royal Oman Police), Al Dakhiliyah (Royal Oman Police), Al Batinah North (Royal Oman Police), Al Batinah South (Royal Oman Police), Al Sharqiyah North (Royal Oman Police), Al Sharqiyah South (Royal Oman Police), Al Dhahirah (Royal Oman Police) and Al Wusta (Royal Oman Police). Choose your governorate above to get practice matched to that authority's branding, question count and pass mark.

Fees are set by the governorate's authority and approved driving schools and can change, so we do not quote a fixed price. In most cases you register with an approved driving school or the traffic department, complete the required lectures, then sit the theory (knowledge) test at an approved centre. Always confirm the current fee and steps with your driving school or the authority before booking.

Yes. Every Oman mock exam and topic test is completely free, needs no account or signup, and you can retake it as many times as you like until you clear the pass mark comfortably.

Ready for the real licence?

Practise here for free, then let Wathim handle the paperwork. We manage Oman driving-licence issuance, transfer and conversion for expats, end to end.