New Mexico Hazmat CDL Practice Test

This is a free 20-question practice test for the Hazmat portion of the New Mexico Commercial Driver's License knowledge exam. Questions are pulled from a pool of 68 drawn from the AAMVA CDL Manual, which is the source document the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division uses to write its actual exam.

How it works: Click an answer. The correct choice highlights in green, and you'll see a short explanation. Aim for 85% or better before you sit for the real test in New Mexico.
Question 1 of 20
A driver is required to carry an ERG (or equivalent) when:
Correct. Whenever hazmat is being transported, the driver must have access to current ERG information for the materials in question.
Question 2 of 20
A vehicle hauling explosives may not be parked within:
Correct. Class 1 explosives have specific parking restrictions — at least 300 feet from open fires; never near schools, theaters, or places where people gather.
Question 3 of 20
A hazmat driver must complete which special training?
Correct. PHMSA requires general awareness, function-specific, safety, security awareness, and in-depth security training (when a security plan applies). Carriers document and re-train every three years.
Question 4 of 20
The Hazardous Materials Table (HMT) lists:
Correct. The HMT in 49 CFR §172.101 lists every hazardous material with its proper shipping name, hazard class, identification number, packing group, label requirements, and special provisions.
Question 5 of 20
Placards are required when:
Correct. Table 1 materials always require placards (any amount). Table 2 materials require placards when 1,001 pounds or more of any combination is loaded.
Question 6 of 20
Placards must be at least how many inches on each side?
Correct. Placards are diamond-shaped, at least 250 mm (about 10.75 inches) on each side.
Question 7 of 20
A vehicle that has been transporting hazmat may need to be:
Correct. After unloading, the vehicle may need decontamination depending on the cargo. Placards may need to be removed unless residue still requires them.
Question 8 of 20
Mixing certain hazmat in one shipment is prohibited because:
Correct. Some classes react dangerously when mixed (e.g., acids with cyanides, oxidizers with flammables). The segregation table prohibits these mixtures.
Question 9 of 20
The shipper must certify on the shipping paper that:
Correct. The shipper signs a certification that the shipment is properly described, packaged, marked, labeled, and complies with HMR.
Question 10 of 20
Who is responsible for proper hazmat packaging and labeling?
Correct. The shipper packages, labels, and certifies the materials. The carrier and driver verify and refuse non-compliant shipments.
Question 11 of 20
After a hazmat incident, the driver should:
Correct. Notify the carrier immediately. Federal incident reports may be required to PHMSA, depending on severity. Retain the shipping paper.
Question 12 of 20
Hazmat drivers must report any change of:
Correct. Address changes must be reported to the state licensing agency in line with state CDL requirements; some states require reporting within 30 days.
Question 13 of 20
A hazmat carrier with hazmat cargo must conduct security awareness training:
Correct. PHMSA requires re-training every three years, including security awareness and the carrier's in-depth security plan if applicable.
Question 14 of 20
A driver must understand the hazmat security plan:
Correct. When a security plan is required (Division 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, certain quantities of toxic-by-inhalation, etc.), drivers receive in-depth security training and a copy or summary of the plan.
Question 15 of 20
In a hazmat fire, you should:
Correct. Identify materials and consult the ERG. Only fight small fires that you can safely extinguish; large fires require professional response. Some materials react violently with water.
Question 16 of 20
When unloading flammable liquids from a cargo tank, the driver should:
Correct. Bonding and grounding equalizes electrical potential between the tank and receiving container, preventing static-spark ignition during product transfer.
Question 17 of 20
Carrying a hazmat shipment without the required shipping paper:
Correct. Operating without proper shipping papers is a regulatory violation and dangerous — emergency responders rely on the paper to identify materials.
Question 18 of 20
You must notify your dispatcher and the carrier whenever:
Correct. Hazmat incidents — spillage, fire, contamination, injury, evacuation, or property damage — require immediate carrier notification.
Question 19 of 20
Class 7 (Radioactive) materials require:
Correct. Class 7 materials use Roman-numeral category labels (RADIOACTIVE I, II, III), placarded based on aggregate Transport Index, and have specific transport limits.
Question 20 of 20
A driver of a placarded hazmat vehicle approaching a tunnel that prohibits hazmat must:
Correct. Many tunnels prohibit certain placarded vehicles. Use the designated alternate route. Bypassing the prohibition is a serious violation.

About the New Mexico Hazmat exam

Most states administer 30 Hazmat questions and require 80% to pass. The exam covers hazard classes, the shipping paper, placards and labels, loading and unloading, driving and parking rules, emergency response, and the Emergency Response Guidebook (ERG).

The New Mexico Motor Vehicle Division follows the federal CDL standards established by FMCSA. To earn the Hazmat credential, you must answer at least 80% of the questions correctly. Many candidates score lower the first time because the test pulls from a large pool — refreshing this page will give you a different mix of questions, drawn from the same authoritative source.

Want more practice? Try the full Hazmat question bank or browse all New Mexico CDL practice tests.