If you currently face a lengthy disqualification period and have complied with this a period of two or four years offence free (depending on your case) and you have not been convicted of certain driving offences involving death or grievous bodily harm, then you may be eligible to remove or appeal your licence disqualification.
Every case is different, so you need to make sure that you are eligible and that you have good prospects for your case.
You can apply if:
Your ‘offence-free’ period depends on what offences your licence was disqualified for. You must show you had no driving offences for either 4 years or 2 years before the date you apply.
It will be 4 years if you are disqualified from driving because of any of these offences:
It will be 2 years if you have been disqualified from driving because:
You must follow in order these 4 steps:
After Roads and Maritime receive your completed form, a review of your driving record will be conducted to determine your eligibility. A copy of your driving record with a Roads and Maritime covering letter will be sent to your preferred return email or postal address. The letter will provide a recommendation on your court application eligibility.
Should your disqualification removal order application be rejected by the local court, you may not be able to make another application for 12 months.
Driving without a current and valid licence is a criminal offence and you may face offences such as driving while disqualified with penalties that include possible imprisonment.
You cannot apply if you have ever been convicted of one of these serious driving offences:
If your application is refused at court, you cannot apply for another 12 month period from the refusal date.
You also remain disqualified during this time and penalties apply for driving while disqualified.
The Traffic Offender Program is an education based course aimed towards changing driving attitudes and behaviour. The content of this course is legislated and the court looks very favourably on completion of the course.
Do not drive until you have a new driver licence!
Before you can drive you must apply for a driver licence from Service NSW.
If you drive before you get a new licence you may be convicted of ‘driving while cancelled’. You could go to gaol for up to 12 months and you could be disqualified from driving again for at least 6 months.
To get a new licence you must do the usual road safety and knowledge tests, and anything else Service NSW or Roads and Maritime Services needs you to do.
Roads and Maritime Services will check if there were any recent driving offences the court didn’t know about when it heard your case. If they believe you did have a traffic offence during the offence free period, your case will be sent back to the court and you won’t be given a licence until the court has re-heard your case.
Sort out any fines!
If you still have any fines to pay you should sort this out straight away. Service NSW may not give you a licence, or may suspend any licence they give you, if you still have fines.
To find out if you have any fines or restrictions in place because you haven’t paid a fine, or if you need help to manage your fines debt, contact Revenue NSW on 1300 655 805.