
No. Traffic violations will not be cleared if left unaddressed, and unresolved violations will prevent the vehicle from passing the annual inspection. Motorcycle Violation Regulations: Article 108: The party involved shall pay the fine at the designated bank within 15 days from the date of receiving the administrative penalty decision. For fines imposed on pedestrians, passengers, and non-motor vehicle drivers, if the party raises no objection, the fine may be collected on the spot. Motorcycle Violation Receipts: Fines shall be issued with a uniform receipt printed by the finance department of the province, autonomous region, or municipality directly under the central government. If such a receipt is not provided, the party has the right to refuse payment.

Last year when I was caught speeding on my motorcycle, I naively thought the same way, only to be harshly taught a lesson by reality. Traffic violations on motorcycles never just disappear automatically! The moment that traffic camera captures your license plate, the data gets logged into the traffic management system—stuck like super glue. I waited a whole month with no updates, only to end up with doubled fines. Now I've learned my lesson: the instant I get a notification on the 12123 app, I grab my ID and head straight to the DMV to settle it. Special warning for brothers who've modified their exhaust pipes—if you don't pay those on-the-spot fines within 15 days, there's a 3% late fee per day, harsher than loan sharks.

Last time I borrowed a friend's motorcycle and was caught entering a restricted zone. My friend said minor traffic violations would be automatically cleared in six months, but it ended up causing issues during his annual inspection. Motorcycle violation records, just like those for cars, are permanently linked to the vehicle owner and must be manually resolved. The data is transmitted from electronic police systems to provincial platforms, and if left unresolved, it can freeze the eligibility for renewing the driver's license. A reminder to everyone: on-the-spot fines must be paid within 15 days; non-on-the-spot violations can be handled before the annual inspection, but it's best not to delay. Also, those with a C1 license should note that motorcycle violation points are combined with car points—accumulating 12 points means you can't drive a car either!

Having ridden motorcycles for 13 years, I can definitively say: traffic violation records do not disappear! Last year, I was caught not wearing a helmet in the suburbs, and the ticket sat ignored for half a year. When I went to transfer ownership for a new bike, I found my records were locked. The Traffic Management 12123 app shows that unresolved violations are kept until the vehicle is scrapped and can even affect next year's insurance premium increase. My advice: within three days of receiving a violation notice: ① Verify the violation photos to prevent cloned plates; ② Use the 12123 APP to pay fines directly; ③ Point deductions require handling in person with your license. Motorcycles have a high rate of plate cloning—if you spot an unusual violation, file an appeal immediately.


