More than 11,000 California drivers are being forced to retake the state’s dreaded written DMV exam after officials uncovered mysterious “irregularities” tied to their original tests — or risk having their license yanked.
The California Department of Motor Vehicles sent an ominous warning out to drivers who had already passed their exams between July 2025 and April 2026, saying they had 30 days to retake the written driving test.
Unlucky recipients report that the heavy-handed letter said their “written driver’s license test results indicate non-compliance with the driver testing criteria required by state law,” according to local reports.
The agency is giving drivers a harsh ultimatum: get to a DMV office and pass the test again, or get off the road.
The DMV has offered little explanation about what went wrong, remaining tight-lipped about the nature of the alleged testing issues. They have also not accused affected drivers of cheating or disclosed exactly what prompted the sweeping retest order.
“Ensuring the integrity of our testing process is essential,” the DMV said in a statement reported by CBS News. “Knowledge tests play a critical role in confirming that drivers understand the rules of the road before they are licensed to drive in California.”
Adding insult to injury, the thousands of targeted drivers can’t just walk into their local branch to the ordeal over with. The letter reportedly dictates that drivers must schedule an official appointment and present the physical warning letter to prove they know what a stop sign looks like all over again.
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