Vehicle Safety Inspection by State (2026)
As of 2026, only 14 states still require a periodic vehicle safety inspection as a condition of registration: New York, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Delaware, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Hawaii, Louisiana, and Missouri. Two big names left the list recently: Texas dropped its passenger-vehicle safety inspection on January 1, 2025, and New Hampshire passed a repeal in its 2025 budget that a federal court has, for now, ordered the state to keep running while an appeal plays out. The other 35 states ended periodic safety inspections years ago, after federal funding lapsed and crash-data studies failed to show a measurable safety benefit. If you live in one of the 14 holdout states, expect to pay roughly $10 to $55 once a year (or every two years) at a state-certified station.
The 14 states that still require a safety inspection
The chart below summarizes the 2026 picture. Frequency, cost, and where you can get the inspection vary widely by state. Prices are the state-set maximums for a standard gasoline passenger car; an emissions test, where required, is charged separately and stacks on top.
| State | Frequency | 2026 Cost | Where |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York | Annual | $10 safety-only; up to $37 with enhanced emissions | DMV-licensed station |
| New Hampshire | Annual (repeal enjoined — still running) | $20-$50 | Authorized inspection station |
| Massachusetts | Annual | $35 | RMV-licensed station |
| Maine | Annual | $12.50 ($18.50 in Cumberland County) | State-licensed station |
| Vermont | Annual | Station-set (~$45 typical) | DMV-certified station |
| Rhode Island | Biennial (every 2 yrs) | $55 | State-licensed station |
| Pennsylvania | Annual | $15-$41 | PennDOT inspection station |
| Delaware | Biennial | Free at DMV lane | State DMV inspection lane |
| North Carolina | Annual | $13.60 safety | NCDMV-licensed station |
| Virginia | Annual | $20 | State Police certified station |
| West Virginia | Biennial (since Jan 2024) | $19 (two-year sticker) | WV State Police certified station |
| Hawaii | Annual | $20-$25 | State-certified station |
| Louisiana | Annual / biennial | $10 ($25 in New Orleans) | OMV-certified brake tag station |
| Missouri | Annual (cars under 10 yrs & 150k mi exempt) | $12 | State Highway Patrol station |
What gets checked during a safety inspection
Every state writes its own inspection manual, but the core checklist barely changes from one to the next. A licensed inspector, working from a printed or tablet-based form, looks at roughly the same systems on every car:
- Brakes. Pad thickness, rotor condition, parking brake function, and brake-line integrity. Thin pads are the failure inspectors write up more than any other nationwide.
- Lights. Headlights (high and low beam), tail lights, brake lights, license-plate light, hazard lights, and reverse lights.
- Tires. Tread depth (most states require at least 2/32"), sidewall condition, and matching tire size on the same axle. Cords showing through the tread is an automatic fail.
- Signal lights and reflectors. Front and rear turn signals, side reflectors where required, and emergency flasher operation.
- Horn. Must be audible and operate from the steering wheel.
- Windshield and wipers. No cracks larger than the state's allowed length (often 6"-12") in the driver's line of sight; both wipers must clear the glass without streaking.
- Exhaust system. No leaks, no missing components from manifold to tailpipe. The exhaust must terminate at or beyond the rear of the vehicle.
- Mirrors. Driver-side mirror is required everywhere; many states also require a passenger-side or interior mirror.
- Seatbelts. All required positions must latch, retract, and show no fraying or cuts.
- Steering and suspension. Tie-rod play, ball-joint wear, and shock leaks. Worn steering components fail in roughly half the states.
Pennsylvania and Virginia have the longest checklists. Hawaii and Louisiana run shorter inspections focused on brakes, lights, and tires. New York pairs the safety check with an OBD-II emissions scan in its enhanced-emissions counties, which is why the price climbs from $10 to as much as $37 in the New York City metro area. The mechanical checklist itself, though, is close to identical from one state to the next.
What it costs in 2026
Most safety-inspection prices are state-capped rather than market-driven, so two stations in the same state usually charge the same number. The cheapest safety-only inspection is New York at $10 for a passenger car (the price only jumps toward $37 if you live in a New York City metro county that also runs an enhanced emissions test). Missouri charges $12, Maine $12.50, North Carolina $13.60, and Pennsylvania starts at $15. West Virginia switched to a two-year sticker in January 2024 and caps the fee at $19 for the full two years, which works out to about $9.50 a year — the lowest annualized cost in the country. The most expensive single fee is Rhode Island at $55, but because Rhode Island runs a biennial program, the annualized cost is only $27.50. Massachusetts ($35) is the priciest flat annual inspection. Vermont is the outlier: it sets no statewide fee, so each certified station posts its own rate, commonly around $45. Delaware is free because the inspection is performed by state employees at the DMV inspection lane rather than by a private shop.
Where to get it done
Every state requires the inspection to be performed by a state-certified station with a licensed inspector on duty. You cannot inspect your own vehicle, and a regular oil-change shop is not automatically certified. The most convenient certified locations are independent repair garages (the bulk of stations in NY, PA, NC, and VA), national chains (Firestone, Pep Boys, Jiffy Lube, and Valvoline participate in many states), dealerships, and state-run lanes (Delaware, Missouri, and parts of West Virginia). The state DMV's published list of certified stations is the authoritative reference. Showing up to an uncertified shop is the most common cause of a wasted trip.
A few practical notes before you go. Bring your registration and proof of insurance; some states will not run the inspection without them. Allow 20 to 45 minutes for a passenger car, longer if the station is busy or your vehicle also needs an emissions scan. Inspectors photograph or scan the VIN and odometer at most modern stations, so the car has to be present and drivable — you cannot inspect a vehicle that is up on a lift for unrelated repairs. If you know a tire or bulb is marginal, fix it in the parking lot before you pull in; an inspector who has already started writing up a fail usually cannot un-fail you on the spot.
The most common fail items
Across the 14 inspection states, repair shops and state DMVs publish failure data each year, and the same names show up at the top every time. Roughly 1 in 6 vehicles fails the first attempt, and four issues account for about 70% of those failures.
- Worn brake pads or rotors — about 22% of failures. Pads at or under the state minimum (often 2 mm or 3 mm of friction material) fail every time.
- Burned-out exterior bulbs — about 18% of failures. A single dead license-plate light or brake bulb is enough to trigger a re-inspection. Check both bulbs in dual-bulb assemblies.
- Cracked or pitted windshield — about 15% of failures. Cracks longer than 6" or any chip in the driver's primary sight area is an automatic fail in most states.
- Tires below tread minimum — about 14% of failures. Run a Lincoln penny upside down in the tread; if you can see the top of Lincoln's head, you fail.
The remaining 30% are spread across exhaust leaks, torn wiper blades, inoperative horns, and frayed seatbelts. For a deeper repair-side checklist, see how to pass a vehicle inspection on the first try.
Reinspection and grace periods
If you fail, every state gives you a grace window to make repairs and return for a free or discounted reinspection. The window varies:
- 15 days: New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Hawaii.
- 30 days: New York, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia.
- 60 days: Missouri, Maine.
- 90 days: Massachusetts (with rejection sticker).
Returning within the window to the same station almost always means the reinspection is free. Going to a different station resets the clock and costs full price again. Driving with an expired or rejected sticker is a moving violation in most states; New York and Pennsylvania impose fines of $25-$200 plus possible registration suspension. Some states also issue a 10-day or 15-day repair sticker that lets you legally drive to the repair shop and back, but not for general use.
Combined safety + emissions states
In several states the safety inspection and the emissions test happen back-to-back at the same station, on the same visit, so you pay both fees at once. New York is the clearest example: in its enhanced-emissions counties the $10 safety check and the OBD-II emissions scan are bundled into a single visit that tops out at $37. North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Virginia also run combined programs in the counties where emissions testing is required, while the rest of each state gets a safety-only inspection. Even where the two are bundled, they are legally separate tests — a car can pass safety and fail emissions, or the reverse. For the full state-by-state breakdown, see our companion guide on emissions inspection by state.
Why most states no longer require safety inspections
Periodic motor vehicle inspection was a federal mandate from 1968 until 1976. After Congress repealed it, the number of states running the program fell steadily — from 31 in the mid-1970s to 19 by 2000, and to 14 today. A 2015 GAO report found no measurable difference in crash rates between inspection and non-inspection states, and that finding has been the centerpiece of every repeal campaign since.
The recent wave is the largest in decades. Mississippi scrapped its $5 annual sticker in 2015. New Jersey and Washington, D.C. dropped or downsized their programs in the 2010s. Texas abolished the passenger-vehicle safety inspection effective January 1, 2025, under House Bill 3297, though it kept a $7.50 "inspection program replacement fee" that every non-commercial vehicle still pays at registration — you pay the old fee, you just skip the inspection. New Hampshire's legislature voted to end inspections in its 2025 budget, but a federal court issued a preliminary injunction in January 2026 ordering the state to keep the program running while it appeals, so New Hampshire drivers are still inspecting their cars for now. Louisiana moved most parishes to a scannable QR-code registration sticker in 2026, leaving a traditional "brake tag" inspection in force mainly in the New Orleans area. Repeal bills have also surfaced in West Virginia and Pennsylvania. The clear direction of travel is toward fewer inspection states, not more.
State-by-state notes that trip people up
The table gives you the headline numbers, but a handful of states have quirks that catch drivers off guard:
- New York separates the safety check from emissions. A safety-only inspection is $10 statewide. If you register in one of the eight New York City metro counties (Bronx, Kings, Nassau, New York, Queens, Richmond, Suffolk, Westchester), the bundled safety-plus-emissions inspection can reach the $37 cap set under 15 NYCRR §79.6. Upstate counties without enhanced emissions cap out lower.
- West Virginia moved to a two-year sticker on January 1, 2024. The $19 maximum covers both years, so you no longer pay an annual fee — budget for it every other year instead.
- Missouri exempts a lot of cars. A vehicle is exempt from the safety inspection for the first ten model years and up to 150,000 miles — but it must meet both conditions. A four-year-old car with 160,000 highway miles still needs an inspection; so does an eleven-year-old car with 40,000 miles.
- Maine charges $12.50 in most of the state but $18.50 in Cumberland County, where the inspection includes an emissions component.
- Vermont is the only holdout with no statewide fee. Each station posts its own labor-based rate, so it pays to call two or three before you go.
- New Hampshire is in legal limbo. The repeal passed but is paused by a federal injunction, and the Department of Safety extended expiring stickers to April 10, 2026 during the confusion. Check the NH DMV site for the current status before assuming you are off the hook.
- Delaware performs the inspection itself at the DMV lane at no charge, but expect a wait — the free lanes back up, especially at month-end.
Frequently asked questions
Does my new car need a safety inspection?
In most inspection states a brand-new vehicle gets an initial inspection or a grace period built into the first registration, and several states (Missouri among them) exempt newer vehicles entirely for a set number of years. Check the rule for your state — a new car bought in Missouri can go a full decade before its first inspection, while a new car in Pennsylvania is inspected within the first year.
Can I drive a car I just bought out of state home before inspecting it?
Yes, within the registration grace window your new state gives you (often 10 to 60 days). You register the vehicle, then take it for inspection — you do not need a passing inspection from the state you bought it in. See our guide on moving and re-registering a car between states for the timelines.
What happens if I drive on an expired inspection sticker?
It is a ticketable moving violation in every inspection state. New York and Pennsylvania fines run roughly $25 to $200, and a long-expired sticker can trigger a registration suspension. The cost of the ticket almost always exceeds the cost of the inspection, so it is not worth putting off.
Is the safety inspection the same as the emissions test?
No. They are legally separate. A safety inspection checks brakes, lights, tires, steering, and the like; an emissions test measures tailpipe or OBD-II data. Some states bundle them into one visit (New York, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Virginia in their emissions counties), but you can pass one and fail the other.
How long does a safety inspection take?
For a passenger car in good condition, 20 to 45 minutes. A busy station, a vehicle that also needs emissions, or a car with marginal components that the inspector has to document can push it longer.