

The fact is, here in Nevada, we usually don’t suffer from a lack of places to park. Perfecting your parallel parking skills takes practice. Striking a barrel is an automatic failure, as that is considered an at fault accident during your driving test. A passing score will have you successfully parking parallel to the curb between the barrels with no more than 18 inches from the curb.

During your driving test, the DMV examiner will have you parallel park between the front and rear set of barrels. They can be recognized by a front set of 2-3 barrels and back set of 2-3 barrels with about 40-feet or so of space in between the sets of barrels. Today, each full service Nevada DMV has a closed parallel parking course set up in or near their parking area. The rumor is that there were too many accidents occurring to those innocent bystander vehicles along the Las Vegas roadways, that the DMV decided to set up their own parallel parking course on site at the various Nevada DMV offices. Years ago, the Nevada DMV would actually have you parallel park behind a parked vehicle spotted along the driving test route. In this post, we will take a look at parallel parking on the driving skills portion of the test and provide some pointers for practicing.

Those that get “hung up” on the driving skills portion of the test also forget that 90-degree parking (aka perpendicular parking) and backing out of a parking space are also scored during the Nevada DMV driving test. In fact, this single maneuver is what most people dread most about the driving test. Most people seeking a Nevada driver’s license are fully aware that parallel parking is one component of the Nevada driving skills test. In this post, we will teach you how to practice parallel parking.
