If you accumulate 100 or more active demerit points within any two year period, your licence will be suspended for a period of three months and you will not be entitled to drive. The suspension period begins as soon as the demerit suspension notice is served on you by the Transport Agency, the police or an authorised agent of the Transport Agency. Any active demerit points recorded on your licence record at the time will be cancelled and will no longer contribute to your demerit point total.
At the end of your demerit suspension, you’ll be unlicensed and not entitled to drive until you’ve reinstated your licence.
Reinstating your licence
At the end of a disqualification or suspension (other than 28-day roadside suspensions) or when your zero alcohol licence expires you will be unlicensed and are not entitled to drive until you have applied at a driver licensing agent to have your licence reinstated and a new licence has been issued. Any licence card held by you at the time of your suspension or disqualification will have been permanently cancelled.
To get your licence back, you must apply at a driver licensing agent.
You will need to:
fill out an application form [PDF, 207 KB]
present evidence of your identity
prove your eyesight meets the required standard
present a medical certificate (if required)
let the agent take your photo and signature
pay the reinstatement fee. 作者: 燚焱炏火 时间: 2017-1-30 16:33:58
Consequences if you drive
If you drive after your suspension or disqualification has ended, but before your licence has been reinstated, you could be fined and forbidden to drive. If you then continue to drive without reinstating your licence, you could be charged with driving while forbidden and the vehicle impounded.