How many vehicles can one driver's license deduct points for?
2 Answers
In one scoring cycle, one driver's license can only deduct points for a maximum of three non-owned vehicles. Below are the specific details about deducting points with a driver's license: More than three vehicles: In one scoring cycle, one driver's license can only deduct points for a maximum of three non-owned vehicles, and real-name authentication is required. If this driver's license deducts points for more than three non-owned vehicles within a year, it will be included in the 'suspected point dealer list.' Notes: For violations that result in a one-time deduction of 12 points, only one driver's license can be used to deduct points, and the corresponding penalties must be accepted. It is not allowed to use two or more driver's licenses to deduct points.
Regarding the issue of driver's license demerit points, as someone who's been driving for 20 years, I think many people misunderstand it. The points are deducted from the driver, not the vehicle itself. Every time I violate traffic rules, points are directly deducted from my license, regardless of whether I'm driving my own car, a friend's car, or a company vehicle – there's no limit on the number of vehicles. Legally, there are only 12 points per cycle, and once they're all deducted, I have to attend retraining. If someone borrows my license to take points for others, that's illegal. If caught by traffic police, the penalties are severe and could even lead to license revocation. So as an experienced driver, I must remind everyone: safety first when driving – no speeding, no drunk driving. Protecting your points means protecting your driving privileges. For occasional violations, seek professional channels to handle them properly; don't play games with point substitution tricks.