Paper license plates typically expire in 90 days — or less – Daily News

Q. Several times I’ve noticed temporary license plates on vehicles long after they expired. How soon should a new car owner expect to wait for their metal plates? I can understand that this is a low-priority-enforcement item for our police agencies.

– Jim Thomson, Huntington Beach

A. Virtually every vehicle on California roads needs temporary or permanent plates. No more hiding behind dealership advertisements slipped into the plate holders.

A heavy user of the temporary plates are new vehicles, which must have valid plates when rolling off of the lot. Dealers log into a Department of Motor Vehicles database and print out temporary plates with unique numbers on weatherproof paper.

Crooks can no longer drive around with so-called dealer plates – so cops, crime witnesses and automatic-license-plate readers can help find them. Yes, yes, crooks can slap on stolen plates from the same make and model of their ride and cross their miserable fingers in hopes of not getting nabbed, but it isn’t a perfect world, is it?

Also, it is tougher for laggards dragging on paying their annual registration tags to avoid getting pulled over.

“TLPs (temporary license plates) are valid until the customer receives the permanent license plates or up to 90 days after the date of sale,” Chris Orrock, a DMV spokesman, told Honk in an email. “Extensions are possible under certain circumstances. The 90-day expiration date is displayed on the TLP.”

It takes four to six weeks to get standard-issue permanent plates from the DMV, he said, and if for any reason the metal ones are behind schedule, extensions for paper plates can be had online or in a field office.

Now, getting personalized plates can take about eight months, Orrock said. So if you, say, buy a new car and want to get new personalized plates, you would get paper plates, then metal ones and, finally, the ones reading “GOHONK” or whatever other missive you get on them.

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