How to Get Back a Driver's License After a Five-Year Revocation?
2 Answers
Driver's licenses revoked for five years due to drunk driving or driving commercial vehicles after drinking cannot be restored in advance. For licenses revoked for other reasons, the application process and required documents for early restoration are as follows: 1. DMV Process: Take a number at the DMV and submit the required documents at the service window; schedule an appointment at the DMV and take the written test (Subject One); after passing, pay the relevant fees at the payment window; collect the driver's license at the license window. 2. Required Documents: 'Application Form for Motor Vehicle Driver's License'; 'Physical Examination Certificate for Motor Vehicle Drivers' issued by a county-level or higher medical institution or a military medical institution at the regimental level or above; original and photocopy of the applicant's valid ID; three recent one-inch, white-background, color passport photos without hats.
If your driver's license has been revoked for five years and you want to get it back, you can only follow the proper procedures—don’t even think about taking shortcuts. After the revocation period ends, you’ll need to retake all the driving tests, just like a new student going through driver’s training. I know a guy, Old Zhang, who had his license revoked for drunk driving. Once his five-year ban was up, he enrolled in driving school and started over from scratch, relearning traffic rules and driving skills from the first subject. He practiced driving two hours a day for three straight months before finally passing the road test for Subject 3. Nowadays, electronic monitoring is even stricter—each car has an instructor watching the dashcam, making it impossible to slack off. Though the process is time-consuming, it helps reinforce safe driving habits. Make sure to check with the DMV beforehand to confirm the exact revocation period, so you don’t waste a trip.