What are the traffic violations that result in 6-point deduction?
2 Answers
There are several types of traffic violations that result in a 6-point deduction: 1. Driving with a suspended license: Driving a motor vehicle while the driver's license is temporarily suspended will result in a 6-point deduction. 2. Violating traffic signals: Driving a motor vehicle in violation of road traffic signals will result in a 6-point deduction. 3. Overloading: Driving a commercial passenger vehicle (excluding buses) or a school bus with passengers exceeding the approved capacity by less than 20%, or driving other passenger vehicles with passengers exceeding the approved capacity by more than 20% will result in a 6-point deduction. 4. Speeding: Driving medium-sized or larger passenger or cargo vehicles, school buses, or hazardous material transport vehicles on highways or urban expressways at speeds exceeding the limit by less than 20%, or driving such vehicles on other roads or driving other motor vehicles at speeds exceeding the limit by more than 20% but less than 50% will result in a 6-point deduction.
A 6-point traffic violation is quite serious. Speeding over 50% is a common one, like driving too fast on city roads, which is very dangerous; reversing or driving the wrong way on a highway also costs 6 points—this behavior is practically life-threatening. Parking on the emergency lane of a highway and blocking rescue access is another violation; failing to yield to a school bus crossing the road also results in such a hefty penalty—children's safety is no trivial matter. Driving a medium or large passenger vehicle while fatigued for over 4 hours without rest can easily lead to accidents when the body can't handle it. Don’t underestimate these point deductions; they can add up and may lead to license suspension or mandatory safety courses, which are quite a hassle. I’ve seen many people suffer big losses due to carelessness—it’s better to drive steadily.