
Violations that involve point deductions cannot be processed online. Below is a detailed introduction to online violation payment: 1. Explanation of the situation: Traffic violations issued through on-site law enforcement must be paid at the location where the violation occurred. For electronic monitoring records with fines of 200 yuan or less (including 200 yuan), penalties can be imposed either at the vehicle's registration location or at the location where the violation occurred. For fines exceeding 200 yuan, which fall under the general procedure, the violator, vehicle owner, or manager must bring their driver's license, vehicle registration certificate, and compulsory traffic to the traffic police department at the location of the violation for processing. 2. Processing procedure: The general procedure applies when, in accordance with laws and regulations, violators are fined more than 200 yuan (excluding 200 yuan), have their driver's license suspended or revoked, or when a unit is fined. In such cases, an investigation must be conducted, evidence collected, and a penalty decision made following the general procedure. The general procedure for traffic violation penalties involves investigation and evidence collection, notification of the penalty matters, reasons, basis, and related rights, hearing statements, defenses, or holding hearings, and finally making a penalty decision.

A couple of days ago, my friend's car also encountered violation code 1625, which couldn't be handled online, so I specifically accompanied him to the DMV to get it clarified. This type of violation usually involves situations like driving a vehicle beyond the permitted license class or severe overloading, resulting in a one-time deduction of 12 points. The traffic authorities require the person involved to be present mainly to verify identity, confirm the illegal act, and make an on-site record. For such high-risk violations, the system is concerned about others handling it impersonally and also worries that the person involved might not be aware of the subsequent requirement to attend training and take exams. The online platform has limited functionality and cannot handle complex procedures involving re-examinations. Nowadays, handling such violations requires two or three trips to the DMV: first to address the violation, then to attend seven days of training, and finally to take the subject one exam. The entire process is designed to ensure you undergo mandatory education under supervision.

Last time I dealt with violation 1625, I called 12123 to inquire why it couldn't be handled online. The customer service explained that serious violations involving license revocation or deducting 12 points at once must be processed in person at the counter. This is because the penalty decision document needs to be printed on-site during the process, staff will verbally explain the severity of the violation, and you must sign the 'Full Education Application Form.' Subsequently, you are required to attend a week-long safety education training, which the online system cannot record these procedural steps. This mandatory measure is like standing guard for running a red light—intentionally making you make extra trips to deepen your awareness of the violation.

Violations like 1625 cannot be processed online mainly due to identity verification issues. Deducting 12 points is considered a serious violation, and traffic laws require in-person verification of whether the driver's license and ID card match to prevent point-deduction fraud. On-site processing requires photo-taking, signing for archiving, and staff will question you about violation details to confirm your awareness. Some regions even require on-site traffic safety knowledge tests, which online systems cannot accommodate. After processing, you must attend mandatory classes at designated locations and pass an exam to retrieve your license—the entire process must be completed offline to form a closed loop.

Just studied this two days ago, violation code 1625 mostly corresponds to driving without the proper license or overloading of passenger vehicles. Handling such violations offline is mandatory, mainly considering three points: first, accumulating 12 penalty points requires compulsory education, which must be registered at the vehicle office; second, it involves temporary confiscation or revocation of the license, requiring physical retrieval of the driver's license; third, to prevent hasty online signature, drivers must be present to hear officers explain the hazards. The procedure includes four steps: pre-review, document verification, penalty notification, and education arrangement, which the online processing system simply can't handle coherently.

Last time I was at the traffic police station, I overheard them saying that violation code 1625 must be processed in person at the counter. This is considered a high-threshold violation with two non-negotiable rules: offenses resulting in a full 12-point deduction require on-site handling, and cases that may lead to license revocation require immediate confirmation. The processing takes at least 30 minutes - they need to verify the driver's license authenticity, fill out a notification form, and ensure the offender understands the consequences. The online system can't perform facial recognition for identity verification nor handle subsequent mandatory course registration. After processing, offenders must schedule a study session via 12123 app, and only after passing the exam can their driving privileges be reinstated.


