
It is most convenient to have a driver's license holder with 4 card slots, but this mainly depends on personal preference. Here are some relevant introductions about driver's licenses: 1. Driving requirements: According to the "Regulations on the Application and Use of Motor Vehicle Driver's Licenses", the driving scope of a C1 driver's license includes small and micro passenger vehicles, light and micro cargo vehicles; light, small, and micro special operation vehicles; small passenger vehicles with seating capacity of 9 or fewer. According to these standards, a C1 license cannot be used to drive vehicles with more than 9 seats. 2. Requirements for test vehicles: light ordinary cargo vehicles with a length of not less than 5 meters, or small ordinary passenger vehicles with a length of not less than 4 meters, or cars with a length of not less than 4 meters.

I've been driving for over a decade and used quite a few license holders. Getting one with 3-5 card slots is the most hassle-free option - it perfectly fits your driver's license, vehicle registration, and compulsory slip in three slots, with room for a gas card and car wash card. Never buy holders with over 6 slots - they bulge awkwardly in your pocket and take up too much space in the glove compartment. I've seen people using 12-slot holders - finding documents becomes a nightmare, especially when waiting in line at highway toll booths. Recommend choosing genuine leather material, keeping thickness under 1cm so it stays discreet even in your breast pocket.

Young people really need to consider practicality when choosing a driver's license holder. I find the 4-card slot version just right. The main slot holds the driver's license, the adjacent one fits the vehicle registration, and the remaining two slots perfectly accommodate the fuel card and residential access card. Last week I tried an 8-card slot version, forcibly stuffing supermarket membership and gym cards inside, which ended up deforming the leather case within six months. If you regularly keep an ETC card and documents in your car, I recommend opting for the 6-card slot version with transparent pockets for quick document visibility.

A three-slot driver's license holder is perfectly sufficient - any extra slots are just unnecessary clutter. This is what I use for my daily commute: one slot for the driver's license, one for the vehicle registration, and the last slot holds the copy of compulsory traffic . I've seen colleagues buy 7-slot holders and force-fit their bank cards and ID cards inside, only to lose everything when their wallet got stolen. If you really need extra slots, choose a design with side pockets - they're much more practical than multi-layer card slots. Remember to keep the thickness no more than twice that of a credit card for easy storage in your shirt pocket.

Girls should consider both aesthetics and practicality when choosing a driver's license holder. My pastel-colored four-slot version works perfectly—main compartment for the license, transparent slot for the vehicle registration, and the remaining two slots for receipts and 4S VIP card. I've tried a six-slot bow-style holder before, but it bulged like a loaf of bread after cramming in three shopping cards, becoming too bulky even for a small crossbody bag. Opt for a short leather case with snap buttons, ensuring slot spacing is wide enough to prevent manicure damage when retrieving cards.

Long-haul drivers, take my advice: get a driver's license holder with at least 6 card slots. As a freight trucker, I use an 8-slot version: the top layer holds my dual licenses plus operating permit, the middle section carries three inter-province passes, and the bottom has a fixed emergency rescue card. For private car owners, a 4-slot model with zippered pouch suffices. Key detail: choose deep compartment dividers to prevent documents from bouncing out on rough roads, and metal D-rings last three times longer than magnetic closures.


