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Motor Vehicles



New District Residents: How to Complete Your DMV Transaction in One Visit

If you live in the District for 30 days or more and operate a vehicle in public space, DC law requires you to obtain a District of Columbia Driver's license, unless you are eligible for reciprocity (students, military, members of Congress, government appointee, diplomats).

Below are tips which will ensure your DMV transactions are successfully completed in the first visit.

Driver License and Non-Driver ID

  1. Proof of identity, proof of social security and proof of residency are required to obtain a driver license or non-driver identification. For licenses, we also require proof of ability to drive.


  2. Click here to review which documents satisfy our proof of identity (i.e., name and birth) requirement.
    Click here to review which documents satisfy our proof of social security requirement.
    Click here to review which documents satisfy our proof of residency requirement.
    Click here to review which documents satisfy our proof of ability to drive requirement.

  3. Applicants must bring original documents. Photocopies, altered documents or notarized copies will not be accepted. Documents with expiration dates, such as passports, must still be valid in order to be accepted.


  4. A single document cannot be used for multiple proofs. For example, your out-of-state license cannot be used as a secondary source for your name and birth (i.e., as the document issued by a government agency) if you are also using it as the proof of your ability to drive.

For additional information on driver licenses, please click here. For additional information on identification cards, please click here.

Vehicle Registration and Inspection

  1. A District license or non-driver ID is required to register a vehicle in the District of Columbia..


  2. District law requires that you obtain a District of Columbia license prior to registering a vehicle. Both of these transactions can be done in one visit if you have all the necessary paperwork to complete both transactions. Therefore, it is important for you not to wait until your out-of-state license or vehicle registration is about to expire in order to start the process for converting to District of Columbia credentials.

  3. DMV must receive the vehicle title to register your vehicle in the District


  4. If there is no lien on the vehicle and you do not have a copy of title, you will need to obtain a duplicate title from the DMV in the jurisdiction in which the vehicle is still titled.

    If there is a lien on the vehicle, you must request that the lienholder send the title to the District DMV. The DMV Lienholder Out-of-State Title Request form* can be downloaded and mailed to your lienholder. You can check online to see if we have received your out-of-state title from your lienholder.

    If the title is not in your name already, then you will owe excise tax on the vehicle since it will be a change of ownership.

  5. The District requires vehicle inspection prior to registration. All vehicles registered in the District must have a valid DC inspection sticker. Valid inspection stickers from other jurisdictions are not accepted.


  6. Click here to make an inspection appointment online. You can use your current out-of-state tags to take your vehicle through inspection. If your tags have expired, you will need to visit a DMV service center, with your title and proof of DC insurance, to obtain temporary tags to take the vehicle through inspection.

  7. Your vehicle must be insured prior to vehicle registration. You must maintain continuous insurance on your vehicle for as long as it is registered in the District.


  8. District law requires proof of valid DC insurance for the vehicle prior to registration in the District. The proof of insurance document must contain valid coverage dates, the VIN of the vehicle and your District address. If you do not receive your proof of DC insurance prior to visiting the DMV office, you can call the insurance company to have the information faxed to us.

    Failure to maintain vehicle insurance will result in insurance lapse fees up to $2,500. If you will not be driving your vehicle for a significant length of time, we encourage you to surrender your tag to avoid insurance fees or tickets.

  9. If you live in a residential parking area and need to obtain a residential parking permit, you will be able to do so at the time of vehicle registration.


  10. Outstanding tickets must be paid prior to obtaining a District license, non-driver ID or vehicle registration.


  11. District tickets will remain on your record until they are paid, regardless of when the ticket was issued. Tickets cannot be adjudicated 120 days after they were issued.

For additional information on vehicle registration, please click here.

For additional information on vehicle inspection, please click here.

For more information on insurance requirements, please click here.


Renewals

Driver licenses, IDs and vehicle registrations can be renewed online. Vehicle registrations cannot be renewed in-person; they can only be renewed online or by mail.

Your driver license and ID can be renewed online for every other renewal period.


* These documents are presented in Portable Document Format (PDF). A PDF reader version 7.0 or higher is required for viewing.
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