Seat Belts
Every seat needs a working seat belt. The belts have to be in good shape and anchored properly. The air bag warning light is checked too, but it will not fail your car by itself.
Every car in New York needs a safety and emissions inspection once a year. Use the free tool below to find your exact due date, see what it costs, and learn what gets checked.
Pick a tab. Answer a few quick questions. Get your answer.
If your car is registered in New York State, the law says you have to get it inspected every 12 months. The rule covers cars, light trucks, vans, motorcycles, and most commercial vehicles. It does not matter if you only drive a little. The car still needs the sticker.
There are two parts to the inspection. The safety check looks at things like your brakes, tires, lights, and seat belts. The emissions check looks at how clean your engine runs. Most cars get both parts in one visit. The whole thing takes about 30 minutes.
Quick tip: Your inspection sticker is on the inside of your windshield, lower left side. It shows the month and year your next inspection is due. The sticker is good through the last day of that month.
Moving to a new state always comes with paperwork. The good news: New York gives you some time before you need a new inspection. The rules depend on whether you have a valid sticker from your old state.
New York will honor that sticker until one of two things happens, whichever comes first:
So if your Pennsylvania sticker is good through June 2026 and you registered in NY in March 2026, you have until June 2026 to get a NY inspection. The PA sticker date came first.
You need a NY inspection right after you register the car. There is no grace period in this case. Plan to get inspected within a few days of getting your NY plates.
Use the calculator above to enter your exact dates and see when you need to be inspected. Pick "I just moved to NY" in the first dropdown.
Buying a used car in New York comes with its own inspection rules. The rules are different depending on if you bought from a dealer or a private seller.
The dealer is supposed to inspect the car within 30 days of the sale and before they hand you the keys. So when you drive off the lot, the car should already have a fresh sticker. After that, you are on the normal 12-month cycle.
If the dealer skipped this step, that is on them. You can call the DMV to report it. But you should still get the car inspected before you drive it much.
You get a 10-day grace period after you register the car in your name. Get it inspected within those 10 days. After that, the normal yearly rule kicks in.
Good idea: Get a private-sale car inspected right away even if you have 10 days. If something fails, you want to know before you drive on it. Catching problems early is always cheaper than catching them late.
The state sets a maximum price for inspections. Shops can charge less but never more. The total is the safety fee plus the emissions fee. Most cars cost between $21 and $37 total.
New York charges different emissions fees in the NYC metro area than the rest of the state. The metro area is called the New York Metropolitan Area, or NYMA. It includes nine counties: Bronx, Kings (Brooklyn), New York (Manhattan), Queens, Richmond (Staten Island), Nassau, Suffolk, Rockland, and Westchester.
Cars that skip the emissions test: Cars less than two model years old, cars more than 25 model years old, and electric cars.
For your exact total, scroll up and use the calculator. Pick "What It Costs" and enter your details.
The inspector goes through a set list from the DMV. There are seven main areas. Each one has its own rules. Here is what the inspector looks at.
Every seat needs a working seat belt. The belts have to be in good shape and anchored properly. The air bag warning light is checked too, but it will not fail your car by itself.
The inspector takes off at least one front wheel to look at your brake pads and rotors. They also check brake fluid, the parking brake, and that your car stops in a straight line.
The inspector checks your steering parts, shocks, springs, and the frame near them. They look for worn or loose parts. They also check your power steering for leaks.
Tread depth has to be at least 2/32 of an inch in two side-by-side grooves. The inspector also looks for cuts, bumps, and damage. Tire pressure is checked but will not fail your car.
All your lights need to work. Headlights, tail lights, brake lights, turn signals, backup lights, license plate light, and hazard flashers all get tested. Even one bad bulb can mean a fail.
Cracks in your windshield over 11 inches long can fail you if they cross the wiper area. Tinted windows that are too dark also fail. Wipers, horn, and mirrors all need to work.
Most gas cars from 1996 and newer get a quick computer scan called OBD II. The scanner plugs into a port under your dashboard and reads your car's brain for problems. If your check engine light is on, you will likely fail this part. Older cars get a different test called Low-Enhanced. Diesel trucks in the NYC area get a smoke test.
Want more detail on each item? Use the "What's Checked" tab in the calculator above. Click any item on the list to read the full rules.
An expired inspection is a real problem. It is not like running a stop sign or speeding a little. The state and local police can pull you over just for an old sticker. Two main things happen if you let it expire.
The fine starts around $25 to $50 if you are less than two months late. After two months, the fine can jump to $100 or more. Plus a state surcharge that adds another $80 or so. The longer you wait, the worse it gets.
The DMV will not let you renew your car's registration without a valid inspection on file. So if your tags are coming up, you have to get inspected first. No way around it.
The fix is simple: Get your inspection. If your sticker is even one day past the month, schedule a visit right away. Most shops can take you the same day or the next day. The longer you wait, the more risk you carry.
If you get in an accident and your inspection is expired, your insurance might give you a hard time. They could argue you were driving illegally. That can affect your claim. Get it taken care of before you have a real problem.
Only a DMV-licensed inspection station can do a New York State inspection. The good news: there are thousands of them across the state. Most auto repair shops have a license. Many gas stations and tire shops too.
Look for the official yellow and black sign outside the shop. It says "Official Inspection Station" and shows the DMV logo. If you see that sign, you are good to go.
Most inspections take 20 to 30 minutes if nothing is wrong. If the shop finds a problem, they will tell you before they fail you. You can fix it on the spot or come back later. Either way, the inspection itself is fast.
Tip for finding the right shop: Pick a shop that does both inspections and repairs. That way if something fails, you can get it fixed in the same visit. A lot of inspection-only places will fail you and send you elsewhere, which means an extra trip.
If we missed your question, the NY DMV website has the full set of rules. Most drivers find their answer right here, though.
Yes. Every car registered in New York State needs a safety and emissions inspection every 12 months. This rule covers cars, light trucks, motorcycles, and most commercial vehicles. Electric cars need the safety part but skip the emissions test.
Most cars cost between $21 and $37 total. That covers the $10 safety fee plus the emissions fee, which is higher in the NYC metro area. The state sets a maximum price. Shops can charge less but never more. Use the calculator on this page to find your exact cost.
If you have a valid out-of-state inspection sticker, New York will honor it until that sticker expires or for one year after you register the car in New York, whichever comes first. If you do not have a valid sticker, you need to get a NY inspection right after you register the car.
You can get a ticket. The fine is usually $25 to $50 if you are less than two months late. After two months, the fine can go up to $100. Plus a state surcharge. You also cannot renew your registration without a valid inspection on file.
The inspector checks seven main areas: seat belts, brakes, steering and suspension, tires, lights, glass and wipers and horn and mirrors, and the emissions system. Most cars also get an OBD II scan that reads the on-board computer for emissions problems.
Yes. Common reasons cars fail include worn tires, bad brakes, broken lights, cracked windshields that block the wiper area, and a check engine light that is on. If your car fails, you have to fix the problem and get it re-inspected before you can drive it legally.
Most cars do. Gas cars from 1996 and newer get an OBD II scan. Older cars and some heavier vehicles get a different test called Low-Enhanced. Cars under two model years old and over 25 model years old are exempt. Electric cars are exempt because they have no tailpipe.
Any DMV-licensed inspection station can do it. Most auto repair shops and many gas stations have a license. Look for the official yellow and black inspection sign outside the shop. You can also check the DMV website to find a licensed station near you.
Scroll back up and use the calculator to lock in your due date, your cost, or the full checklist. Save this page or share it with someone who needs it.