North Carolina Eliminating Vehicle Registration Cards and Plate Stickers

NCDMV

North Carolina drivers will no longer receive physical vehicle registration cards or annual license plate renewal stickers when a new statewide system takes effect this fall.

The North Carolina vehicle registration changes begin October 1, 2026, and apply to vehicle registrations and registration renewals submitted on or after that date.

The change is part of a broader effort to reduce administrative costs and move the state’s vehicle-registration process to a secure electronic system. Vehicle owners, law enforcement officers and other authorized users will be able to access and verify registration information electronically.

What Drivers Will Receive

Instead of receiving a traditional registration card, vehicle owners will receive an electronic notice containing their registration information. The North Carolina Division of Motor Vehicles will also maintain an electronic record showing the vehicle’s current registration status and expiration date.

Drivers covered by the new system will no longer be required to carry a physical registration card inside their vehicle. Law enforcement officers will be able to confirm whether a registration is current by checking the state’s electronic records.

Vehicle owners who prefer a paper copy will still be able to request one from the DMV. A printed copy may be requested in person or through an online DMV portal. The state may charge a fee limited to the actual cost of printing and mailing the document.

The North Carolina vehicle registration changes also eliminate the small annual renewal sticker placed on the corner of a license plate. A vehicle’s expiration date will instead appear in the electronic registration system and on the electronic notice sent to the owner.

Annual Renewals Are Not Going Away

The move to electronic records does not eliminate North Carolina’s annual vehicle-registration requirement. Owners must still renew their registration on time, pay the required registration fee and complete any applicable vehicle-property-tax payment.

Required safety and emissions inspections are also not being eliminated by the North Carolina vehicle registration changes. A vehicle that is subject to inspection must still pass that inspection before its registration can be renewed.

The primary difference is how the expiration date will be documented. Inspection deadlines will be tied to the expiration date stored in the vehicle’s electronic registration record instead of the date printed on a license plate sticker.

What Drivers Should Do

Drivers do not need to remove an existing registration sticker or discard a valid registration card before the new system begins. The transition applies when a registration or renewal is processed on or after October 1.

Vehicle owners should make sure the DMV has their correct mailing address and email information so they receive renewal reminders and electronic registration notices. Drivers should also save the electronic notice where it can be easily accessed if needed.

The North Carolina vehicle registration changes will reduce the amount of paperwork mailed to vehicle owners, but they do not change the responsibility to keep a vehicle legally registered, insured and inspected.

Beginning October 1, drivers should expect the renewal process to end with an updated electronic record rather than a new paper card and plate sticker.

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