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Check your photo license expiry date now

synergy

Platinum Member
Aug 20, 2008
304
1
28
Bicester
Check your photo license expiry date now.
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Please pass on to all friends/colleagues

Unwitting motorists face £1,000 fines as thousands of photo card driving licences expire.

Thousands of motorists are at risk of being fined up to £1,000 because they are unwittingly driving without a valid licence.


They risk prosecution after failing to spot the extremely small print on their photo card licence which says it automatically expires after 10 years and has to be renewed - even though drivers are licensed to drive until the age of 70.

The fiasco has come to light a decade after the first batch of photo licences was issued in July 1998, just as the they start to expire.

Motoring organisations blamed the Government for the fiasco and said 'most' drivers believed their licences were for life.

A mock-up driving licence from 1998 when the photo cards were launched shows the imminent expiry date as item '4b'

They said officials had failed to publicise sufficiently the fact that new-style licences - unlike the old paper ones - expire after a set period
and have to be renewed.

To rub salt into wounds, drivers will have to a pay £17.50 to renew their card - a charge which critics have condemned as a 'stealth tax' and which will earn the Treasury an estimated £437million over 25 years.

Official DVLA figures reveal that while 16,136 expired this summer, so far only 11,566 drivers have renewed, leaving 4,570 outstanding.

With another 300,000 photo card licences due to expire over the coming year, experts fear the number of invalid licences will soar, putting thousands more drivers in breach of the law and at risk of a fine.

At the heart of the confusion is the small print on the tiny credit-card-size photo licence, which is used in conjunction with the paper
version.

Just below the driver name on the front of the photo card licence is a series of dates and details - each one numbered.

Number 4b features a date in tiny writing, but no explicit explanation as to what it means.

The date's significance is only explained if the driver turns over the card and reads the key on the back which states that '4b' means 'licence valid to'.

Even more confusingly, an adjacent table on the rear of the card sets out how long the driver is registered to hold a licence20- that is until his or her 70th birthday.

A total of 25million new-style licences have been issued but - motoring experts say - drivers were never sufficiently warned they would expire after 10 years.

Motorists who fail to renew their licences in time are allowed to continue driving. But the DVLA says they could be charged with 'failing to surrender their licence', an offence carrying a £1,000 fine.

AA president, Edmund King said: 'It is not generally known that photo card licences expire: there appears to be a lack of information that people will have to renew these licences.

'People think they have already paid them for once over and that is it.
'It will come as a surprise to motorists and a shock that they have to pay an extra £17.50.'

The AA called on the Government to use the annual £450million from traffic enforcement fines to offset the renewal charge.
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(coverage of this story in The Times can be found here)
 

Gee Tee

1/2 man - 1/2 pogo stick
Mar 21, 2007
3,172
786
148
Dartford, UK
The 10 year cycle is because the photo needs to be updated regularly, just like on a UK passport. Otherwise you could end up with a photo ID that's 50+ years old.

This is also the reason I'm hanging onto my old pink paper licence. It's in tatters and held together with sellotape, but I'll only replace it when I have to. There's also been problems with renewed licences having errors, or licence catagories dropped off due to DVLA balls ups. Some poor sod had to re-take his bike test after the DVLA deleted info from his licence, and then said database had no record of him ever taking it - muppets! :mad:

I'll take a copy of mine and get it witnessed by local cop shop, before sending it away for a replacement, just in case the numpties at the DVLA decide to play silly buggers.
 

Silky

-Relentless-
Aug 31, 2004
504
6
43
Have to look in to this some more as I was sure that the only really important part is the paper licence. The photo ID you can live without. Hmmm hi ho hi ho off to the DVLA website we all go :)
unless both parts are together the licence isnt valid