25 realistic Hazardous Materials practice questions for West Virginia CDL applicants. Required for: Drivers transporting placarded hazardous materials. Official test: 30 questions, 24 correct to pass.
Question 1 of 25 · Placards
When is a placard required for any quantity?
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A.
Some Table 1 materials such as Division 1.1 explosives
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B.
All HazMat over 1,001 pounds gross
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C.
Only Division 6 materials
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D.
Never required for small loads
Correct answer: A.
Table 1 materials require placards for any quantity.
Question 2 of 25 · Shipping Papers
Where must HazMat shipping papers be kept while loading or unloading?
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A.
In the cab only
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B.
On the dock with the cargo
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C.
On the seat of the cab or in a door pouch within reach
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D.
Locked in the glove box
Correct answer: C.
Papers must be readily accessible at all times during transport.
Question 3 of 25 · Loading
When loading or unloading HazMat:
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A.
Set the parking brake
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B.
Be sure the cargo is properly braced
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C.
Stay close to the vehicle
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D.
All of the above
Correct answer: D.
Keep the brakes set, secure cargo, and remain on alert during loading and unloading.
Question 4 of 25 · Shipping Papers
Which of these documents must accompany the HazMat?
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A.
Shipping papers
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B.
Hazard placards
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C.
Emergency response info
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D.
All of the above
Correct answer: D.
Shipping papers, placards, and emergency info must all accompany the load.
Question 5 of 25 · Inspection
HazMat drivers must inspect tires:
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A.
Once a day
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B.
At the start of the trip and at every stop
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C.
Once a week
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D.
Only at weigh stations
Correct answer: B.
Inspect tires before the trip and at each stop because hot or damaged tires raise fire risk.
Question 6 of 25 · HazMat Driving
Drivers transporting Division 1.1, 1.2, or 1.3 explosives may NOT:
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A.
Take a route that goes through tunnels prohibiting explosives
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B.
Refuel at any station
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C.
Travel during business hours
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D.
Cross any state line
Correct answer: A.
Avoid tunnels and routes prohibiting explosives. Use only approved routes.
Question 7 of 25 · HazMat Driving
When transporting HazMat over long distances, drivers should:
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A.
Stay alert, take rest breaks, and inspect the load regularly
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B.
Drive at maximum speed limit
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C.
Skip rest stops to save time
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D.
Avoid highways
Correct answer: A.
Stay alert with regular rest breaks; inspect cargo at every stop.
Question 8 of 25 · Loading
Which of these can never be hauled with explosives?
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A.
Cyanides or other toxic substances
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B.
Building materials
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C.
Foodstuffs
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D.
Newspapers
Correct answer: A.
Cyanides, certain other poisons, and other incompatible substances cannot be loaded with explosives.
Question 9 of 25 · HazMat Driving
Which is true about smoking near HazMat vehicles?
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A.
Smoking is fine while driving
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B.
Smoking is prohibited within 25 feet of certain materials
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C.
Smoking is allowed at truck stops
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D.
Smoking is allowed in residential areas
Correct answer: B.
Smoking is forbidden within 25 feet of explosives, oxidizers, and flammables.
Question 10 of 25 · Shipping Papers
Drivers must check shipping papers for:
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A.
Proper shipping name, hazard class, identification number
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B.
Total quantity
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C.
Emergency response number
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D.
All of the above
Correct answer: D.
Each entry must include the shipping name, class, ID number, quantity, and emergency contact.
Question 11 of 25 · Placards
Which placard color usually means a flammable material?
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A.
Red
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B.
Yellow
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C.
Green
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D.
Blue
Correct answer: A.
Red typically indicates flammable materials.
Question 12 of 25 · Placards
Yellow placards generally indicate:
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A.
Flammable solids
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B.
Oxidizers
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C.
Corrosives
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D.
Radioactive materials
Correct answer: B.
Yellow placards usually indicate oxidizers.
Question 13 of 25 · HazMat Driving
When transporting Class 1 explosives, the driver must:
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A.
Park anywhere convenient
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B.
Have a written route plan and follow it
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C.
Drive only at night
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D.
Drive only on local roads
Correct answer: B.
Drivers must have a route plan and avoid populated areas where possible.
Question 14 of 25 · Shipping Papers
Where can drivers find emergency contact information for the materials they're hauling?
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A.
On the placards
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B.
In the shipping papers
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C.
On the trailer doors
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D.
In the glove box
Correct answer: B.
A 24-hour emergency contact number must appear on the shipping papers.
Question 15 of 25 · Placards
When must placards be displayed?
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A.
Before the vehicle is loaded
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B.
Once the HazMat is loaded and secured before driving
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C.
After the trip ends
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D.
Only at weigh stations
Correct answer: B.
Drivers must placard once HazMat is loaded and verify before moving the vehicle.
Question 16 of 25 · Security
Which is true about HazMat training?
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A.
Drivers must be retrained every 3 years
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B.
Training is optional
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C.
Only new drivers need training
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D.
Training is the same as for non-HazMat
Correct answer: A.
HazMat training is required every three years, including security awareness.
Question 17 of 25 · Emergencies
What is the first thing you should do if your HazMat load catches fire?
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A.
Pull over, away from buildings or vehicles, then call 911
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B.
Drive to the nearest hospital
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C.
Continue to destination
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D.
Try to put it out with snow
Correct answer: A.
Stop in a safe place, away from people and buildings, then notify emergency services.
Question 18 of 25 · HazMat Basics
Which is the goal of HazMat regulations?
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A.
To make HazMat transport safer for everyone
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B.
To allow easy transport of HazMat
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C.
To increase shipping costs
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D.
To require more inspections
Correct answer: A.
HazMat rules contain risk to public safety, property, and the environment.
Question 19 of 25 · HazMat Driving
When can drivers smoke around a HazMat vehicle?
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A.
While driving only
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B.
When parked at a truck stop
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C.
Never within 25 feet of certain materials
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D.
Whenever convenient
Correct answer: C.
Smoking is forbidden within 25 feet of HazMat including explosives, oxidizers, or flammables.
Question 20 of 25 · Loading
What does "blasting agents" refer to?
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A.
Materials used to detonate explosives
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B.
A class of explosives sensitive to ignition
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C.
Cleaning agents
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D.
Aerosol propellants
Correct answer: A.
Blasting agents are materials designed to be set off using a detonator.
Question 21 of 25 · Emergencies
What does "ERG" stand for?
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A.
Emergency Response Guide
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B.
Energy Regulations Guide
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C.
Environmental Resource Guide
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D.
Emissions Reduction Guide
Correct answer: A.
The DOT Emergency Response Guidebook contains response info for HazMat incidents.
Question 22 of 25 · Parking
Some HazMat vehicles cannot be parked within how many feet of a bridge, tunnel, or building?
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A.
100 feet
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B.
200 feet
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C.
300 feet
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D.
500 feet
Correct answer: C.
Class 1 (explosives) generally must not be parked within 300 feet of bridges, tunnels, or buildings.
Question 23 of 25 · CDL Rules
Drivers transporting HazMat must have:
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A.
Only a regular driver license
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B.
A valid CDL with HazMat endorsement and TSA security threat assessment
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C.
A passport
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D.
Physician's certification only
Correct answer: B.
A current CDL with HazMat endorsement (and TSA background check) is required.
Question 24 of 25 · Loading
What is "compatibility group letter"?
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A.
A code that tells which explosives can be loaded together
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B.
A type of placard
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C.
A type of vehicle
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D.
A type of safety vest
Correct answer: A.
Letters such as "A," "B," etc., classify explosives that can be transported together.
Question 25 of 25 · Placards
How are placards different from labels?
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A.
Labels go on packages; placards go on vehicles
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B.
Placards go on packages and labels go on vehicles
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C.
They are the same
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D.
Labels are only required outside the U.S.
Correct answer: A.
Labels mark individual packages; placards identify HazMat on vehicles.
About the Hazardous Materials Test
The Hazardous Materials (HazMat) test covers the rules for transporting materials that pose a risk to health, safety, and property. Topics include the hazardous materials table, shipping papers, marking, labeling, placarding, loading and unloading, bulk packaging, driving and parking rules, communications, emergencies, and hazardous materials regulations enforced by the U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration. A federal Transportation Security Administration (TSA) background check is also required.
The West Virginia Division of Motor Vehicles administers this knowledge test as part of its commercial driver license program. To earn the HazMat Endorsement (H) on your West Virginia CDL, you need to score at least 24 out of 30 on the official version.
Topics covered on this practice test
- Placards: 5 questions
- HazMat Driving: 5 questions
- Shipping Papers: 4 questions
- Loading: 4 questions
- Emergencies: 2 questions
- Inspection: 1 question
- Security: 1 question
- HazMat Basics: 1 question
- Parking: 1 question
- CDL Rules: 1 question
How to use this practice test
- Read each question carefully. CDL questions are written precisely — small wording differences matter.
- Click "Show Answers & Explanations" only after answering every question. Don't peek mid-test.
- Read the explanation for every question, even ones you got right. The reasoning is more important than the answer.
- Repeat the test until you score 100%. The questions are deterministic per state, so you can track your improvement over multiple sessions.
- Move on to the other endorsement tests for West Virginia until you're ready for the official exam.
Tips specific to the Hazardous Materials test
HazMat is the longest knowledge test (30 questions) and adds a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) background check. Most candidates struggle with placard colors, the segregation table, shipping paper requirements, and emergency response procedures. Use the official Emergency Response Guidebook (ERG) alongside this practice set.