Do cars still need to display annual inspection and insurance stickers?
2 Answers
Currently, cars still need to display annual inspection and insurance stickers. Below is relevant information about annual inspections: 1. Introduction: Annual inspection, also known as 'annual examination,' refers to the enterprise annual inspection stipulated by the 'Enterprise Annual Inspection Measures,' also called 'business annual inspection' or 'industrial and commercial enterprise annual inspection.' 2. Regulations: On February 19, 2014, the State Administration for Industry and Commerce issued a notice stating that the enterprise annual inspection system would officially cease on March 1. According to the 'Registered Capital Registration System Reform Plan,' the enterprise annual report publicity system officially replaced the enterprise annual inspection system. 3. Significance: This move signifies that the business annual inspection system will officially become a thing of the past. Under the newly introduced 'Registered Capital Registration System Reform Plan' by the State Council, the enterprise annual report publicity system has officially replaced the enterprise annual inspection system.
I remember asking about this specifically when I renewed my license at the DMV last year. Now electronic annual inspection stickers have been rolled out nationwide, so we don't need to put those hard-to-remove paper stickers on windshields anymore. The electronic policy for compulsory traffic insurance can also be checked on mobile phones - you can directly pull up the electronic certificate in the 12123 APP to show traffic police. Just to be safe, I still prefer to save screenshots of the electronic policy in my phone's photo album as backup in case there's no signal. Some older DMVs might suggest keeping a paper copy in the glove box, but for vehicles manufactured after 2022, basically no paper stickers need to be displayed anymore - the windshield looks much cleaner now.