License Plates and Parking Placards for Persons with Disabilities
Persons with disabilities in Illinois can apply to receive special license plates or parking placards. This guide will give you a breakdown of related laws and regulations for license plates and parking placards for persons with disabilities.
License Plates
Individuals with a permanent disability may obtain Persons with Disabilities License Plates for vehicles titled in their name. An immediate family member residing in the same household may obtain two sets of plates if the qualifying person with disabilities does not own a vehicle and must rely on someone else for transportation.
Corporations, school districts, limited liability companies, nursing homes, convalescent homes and special education cooperatives transporting eligible persons may obtain these plates as well. These plates DO NOT exempt the authorized holder from parking meter fees and time limitations at parking meters.
Parking Placards
Disability parking placards may be used in any vehicle in which the authorized holder is driving or is a passenger.
The four types of disability parking placards are:
Meter-Exempt Permanent
This placard is issued to persons with permanent disabilities that significantly impairs their ability to access a parking meter. There are specific types of disabilities that meet this qualification.
The placard allows the authorized holder to park in spaces reserved for persons with disabilities such as a mall, grocery or retail store, and exempts the holder from parking meter fees and time limitations at meters exceeding a 30-minute time limit. Placards expire on the last day of the holder’s birth month in 2018.
Permanent
This placard is issued to persons with other types of permanent disabilities. The placard allows the authorized holder to park in spaces reserved for persons with disabilities such as a mall, grocery or retail store. The placard DOES NOT exempt the holder from parking meter fees and time limitations. Placards expire on the last day of the holder’s birth month in 2018.
Temporary placards
This placard is issued to persons with a temporary disability. The placard is valid for the length of time indicated by the certifying physician, not to exceed six months if issued by the Secretary of State and 90 days if issued by a local municipality. The placard DOES NOT exempt the authorized holder from parking meter fees and time limitations.
Organization placards
This placard is issued to organizations that offer free transportation to persons with disabilities. The placard allows the authorized holder to park in spaces reserved for persons with disabilities when transporting persons with disabilities. The placard DOES NOT exempt the holder from parking meter fees and time limitations. Placards expire on April 30, 2018.
For more information on any of the items discussed in this chapter, visit www.cyberdriveillinois.com, or call 800-252-8980, or see
The following article contains information about Illinois license plate laws, regulations and requirements.
License Plate Requirements
Passenger vehicles, trucks and vans must display two plates, one on the front and one on the rear. License plate frames should not cover any of the information on the license plates. License plates covers are not allowed. When a vehicle is sold, the license plates should be removed and kept by the seller.
In Illinois, license plates remain with the owner, not the vehicle. Motorcycles, mopeds, trailers, semitrailers and buses registered under apportionment provisions must display one license plate on the rear of the vehicle. Truck-tractors and apportioned straight trucks must have one license plate on the front of the vehicle.
License Plate Replacement in 2017
Beginning January 2017, the Secretary of State’s office will begin replacing the current designed license plates. Vehicle owners with license plates manufactured in 2000-2001 will be the first to obtain a newly designed license plate when they renew their vehicle registrations in 2017. For more information about the program, visit www.cyberdriveillinois.com.
Temporary Registration Permit
When owner(s) applies for registration for their vehicle, they may be issued a Temporary Registration Permit (TRP). This permit must be displayed in the same place and manner as a rear license plate. The TRP is valid for 90 days from the issuance date, although it may be reissued if the license plates do not arrive within 90 days.
Once the owner(s) receive the license plates, the TRP should be removed and replaced with the permanent license 92 plates. For the vehicle owner’s protection, the permit should be destroyed and discarded upon removal. TRPs are available through Illinois licensed dealers, licensed remittance agencies, currency exchanges and Secretary of State facilities.
License Plate Renewal
As a courtesy, about 60 days before a vehicle registration expires, owner(s) may receive a reminder postcard, an email and/or renewal notice from the Secretary of State’s office. If any vehicle information has changed, owner(s) must submit proof the registration has been transferred to another vehicle.
Owner(s) may renew online at www.cyberdriveillinois.com, by mail, by visiting a Secretary of State facility, or by calling the toll-free number on the postcard and/or renewal notice. Owner(s) also may renew at certain banks, savings and loans, currency exchanges, credit unions and remittance agencies.
Owner(s) are encouraged to immediately affix the renewal sticker to the upper right side of the rear license plate. If the owner does not immediately display the renewal sticker and the current sticker has expired, law enforcement may stop the vehicle and issue a ticket.
For the first 30 days following renewal, Illinois law allows motorists to drive without an up-to-date vehicle renewal sticker displayed on their license plate provided they have a receipt in their vehicle from the Secretary of State proving they purchased a sticker online before expiration, but have not yet received it. The printed receipt is only valid as proof of registration for 30 days from the expiration of the registration sticker currently displayed on the license plate.
Registration Renewal for Veterans
Members of the U.S. Armed Forces, serving in active duty or as a reservist, who can show proof of service in a combat mission, shall have their standard vehicle registration fee waived for the renewal period immediately following their return to the United States. Proof must be shown at the time of registration renewal.
If the vehicle owner(s) are a member of the U.S. Armed Forces serving in a non-combat capacity, a civilian employee of the Armed Forces or an employee of the U.S. Department of Defense serving outside the United States but are a legal resident of Illinois, they have 45 days from their date of return to obtain or renew the vehicle registration.
Special License Plates
Personalized and vanity license plates are available for passenger vehicles, second division vehicles weighing 8,000 pounds or less, motorcycles, vehicles operated by persons with disabilities, recreational vehicles, recreational trailers and antique vehicles. Applicants should allow at least 45 days from the time the order is placed to receive their license plates.
Reduced-fee License Plates
Senior citizens and persons with disabilities who qualify for the Benefit Access Program (formerly known as Circuit Breaker) tax relief through the Illinois Department on Aging are eligible for reduced license plate fees for passenger (standard license plates and specialty license plates) and recreational vehicles. One discount per year is allowed. For more information, please call the Illinois Department on Aging at 800-252-8966 or 888-206-1327 (TTY), or see Illinois Vehicle Code.