Alcohol Server Practice Test
Master responsible alcohol service with 200 expert-crafted questions covering laws, ID checking, intoxication signs, intervention, dram shop liability, BAC factors, serving minors, and house policies.
About This Alcohol Server Practice Test
This comprehensive 200-question practice test covers everything you need to know for responsible alcohol service certification. Whether you are preparing for a TIPS, ServSafe Alcohol, or state-specific alcohol server exam, these questions will help you build confidence and knowledge.
Topics Covered
- Responsible Service Laws — 25 questions on legal requirements, licensing, and regulations
- Checking IDs — 25 questions on verifying age, spotting fake IDs, and proper procedures
- Signs of Intoxication — 25 questions on behavioral, physical, and cognitive signs
- Intervention Techniques — 25 questions on cutting off patrons and de-escalation
- Dram Shop Liability — 25 questions on legal liability for establishments and servers
- BAC Factors — 25 questions on blood alcohol concentration and metabolism
- Serving Minors — 25 questions on preventing underage service and legal penalties
- House Policies — 25 questions on establishment guidelines and best practices
About the Alcohol Server Practice Test
Alcohol server (and seller) certification — in the style of TIPS and TABC programs — trains anyone who serves or sells alcohol to do so responsibly and legally. This free practice test covers the core responsible-beverage-service topics found on the real exam.
What's on the alcohol server test?
- Checking IDs and spotting fake or altered identification
- Recognizing the signs of intoxication and when to stop service
- Understanding blood alcohol concentration (BAC) and what affects it
- Laws on serving minors and intoxicated guests
- Dram shop liability and the server's legal responsibility
- Safe strategies to slow or refuse service
How to pass
- Focus on the legal drinking age rules and acceptable forms of ID.
- Learn the visible signs of impairment, since many questions are scenario-based.
- Practice the “what would you do” situations until they feel natural.