Can the car still be driven after two 6-point deductions?
1 Answers
After two 6-point deductions, the car cannot be driven. The motor vehicle driver's license will be temporarily confiscated, and the license holder must complete the subject one study and take the subject one exam within the specified time. The license will be returned upon passing the exam. For a formal driver's license with two 6-point deductions, the following applies: Traffic police on-site penalties: If both 6-point deductions are from on-site penalties by traffic police, no one else can take the penalty for you. If the license reaches 12 points, you must attend 'full-score education' and then take the subject one exam. Upon passing, the license will be returned and the points cleared. Electronic police: If one or both deductions are from electronic police, you can ask a friend to take one 6-point penalty, avoiding the need for full-score education. C1 license: For C1 and above licenses, if points are deducted within a scoring cycle, an annual review is required within 30 days after the cycle ends. According to Article 58 of the 'Regulations on the Application and Use of Motor Vehicle Driver's Licenses' (Ministry of Public Security Order No. 123): If a motor vehicle driver accumulates 12 points within a scoring cycle, the traffic management department of the public security authority shall confiscate the driver's license. The driver must attend a seven-day study on road traffic safety laws and regulations within 15 days at the issuing authority or the authority where the violation occurred. After the study, the vehicle management office must conduct an exam on road traffic safety laws and regulations within 20 days. If passed, the points will be cleared, and the license returned. If failed, the driver must continue studying and retake the exam. Refusal to study or take the exam will result in the license being suspended by the traffic management department.