New License Plates Coming in 2025
New license plates are coming in 2025! The new license plate showcases Pennsylvania as the birthplace of America. It features the Liberty Bell and the text, “Let Freedom Ring.”
A registration plate is deemed illegible when one or more numbers or letters cannot be recognized from 50 feet or if the registration plate shows any blistering, peeling, discoloration or loss of reflectivity. When a registration plate becomes illegible, PennDOT has two main ways of replacing them.
First, the law allows PennDOT to replace a registration plate upon request of a vehicle owner when an authorized representative of PennDOT or law enforcement determines that a registration plate is illegible. Vehicle safety inspection mechanics are authorized representatives of PennDOT for purposes of determining if a registration plate is legible.
To apply for a free replacement of your current registration plate, the vehicle owner should print Form MV-46, “Application to Replace Registration Plate,” obtained from PennDOT's Driver and Vehicle Services website and taking it to either a law enforcement official or a certified inspection station to verify the need for a replacement due to illegibility. The vehicle owner is then responsible for signing and returning the completed Form MV-46 (PDF) to PennDOT in order to receive a replacement registration plate free of charge.
For more information about this program, please reference the Registration Plate Re-Issuance Fact Sheet (Illegible Registration Plate Replacement) FAQ.
Second, the law also allows PennDOT to order a general reissuance. Standard issue passenger registration plates that start with the tag configuration ‘E’, ‘F’, ‘G’, ‘H’, 'J' and truck registration plates that start with tag configuration ‘Y’, are among the oldest on the road and need to be replaced. So, if you have a standard issue registration plate beginning with a ‘E’, ‘F’, ‘G’, ‘H’, 'J' or ‘Y’, you will get a new registration plate the next time your registration plate is transferred to a different vehicle. Passenger registration plates that start with a tag configuration ‘D’ are the oldest plates on the road. PennDOT has begun replacing the ‘D’ configuration through the mail. Customers will receive a letter informing them when they should expect to receive their new plate.
Returning a Registration Plate
If you are returning a Pennsylvania registration plate that is no longer valid or required, please return the Pennsylvania registration plate to:
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
Return Tag Unit
P.O. Box 68597
Harrisburg, PA 17106-8597
Once your plate has been received by PennDOT, it will be
marked
as a "dead tag" on the vehicle record. By returning your Pennsylvania registration plate to PennDOT, this will help protect you.