Is a new car inspected every three years?
1 Answers
New cars do not require annual inspection for the first three years; they only need an inspection after six years. Although annual inspections are not required during this period, it is necessary to obtain an inspection compliance label every year. For non-commercial passenger vehicles, new cars are exempt from inspection for the first six years, after which an annual inspection is required. Vehicles eligible for the six-year inspection exemption policy: The vehicle must be non-commercial; the approved seating capacity must be six or fewer; the vehicle type specified on the driving license includes: sedan (mini, small, medium, large), mini ordinary passenger vehicle, mini off-road passenger vehicle, small ordinary passenger vehicle, small off-road passenger vehicle, small special-purpose passenger vehicle. Important notes: If a new car does not meet the conditions for the six-year inspection exemption, it must follow the standard procedure. This involves taking the vehicle to an inspection station for examination, obtaining an inspection certificate upon passing, and then submitting the required documents (ID card, driving license, vehicle and vessel tax or tax exemption certificate, compulsory traffic insurance policy) to the service window to receive the annual inspection label.