What is Violation Code 10393?
2 Answers
Violation code 10393 refers to motor vehicles parked or temporarily stopped in violation of regulations. Below is relevant information about vehicle violation code 10393: 1. First digit code: This is the behavior classification code, which includes categories 1 to 5 and 7, 8: 1 indicates motor vehicle passage; 2 indicates non-motor vehicle passage; 3 indicates pedestrian or passenger passage; 4 indicates expressway passage; 5 indicates no other regulations. 2. Second digit code: This is the point deduction classification code, which includes categories 0, 1, 2, 3, 6, 7: 0 indicates no points deducted; 1 indicates 1 point deducted; 2 indicates 2 points deducted; 3 indicates 3 points deducted; 6 indicates 6 points deducted; 7 indicates 12 points deducted. 3. Third, fourth, and fifth digits: These are the sequential numbers for illegal behaviors. The original traffic violation code table from the Ministry of Public Security contains 337 types of illegal behaviors: among which 175 are for motor vehicle passage; 55 for non-motor vehicle passage; 30 for pedestrian or passenger passage; 28 for expressway passage; and 49 for other regulations.
I also encountered such confusing codes when checking violation records, and the number 10393 does seem unfamiliar. Common traffic violation codes are usually five-digit, like 6011 for not wearing a seatbelt or 1625 for running a red light. I recommend logging directly into the Traffic Management 12123 APP, entering your vehicle information in the violation processing section, and the system will display the specific violation location, time, captured photos, and the offense. Last time, a friend of mine faced a similar situation and eventually found out it was for driving over a guide line. When handling it, remember to verify the surveillance photos—once, I discovered the system mistakenly recorded another car’s cloned plate violation under mine.