Virginia’s driver’s license renewal process treats seniors differently to promote road safety. Drivers 75 and older face stricter in-person requirements, including vision screenings, unlike younger adults who can often renew remotely.
Renewal Basics for All Drivers
Standard licenses last eight years, expiring on your birthday. Renew up to one year early via online, mail, or in-person at DMV centers or DMV Connect locations.
DMV sends reminders 90 days prior by mail, email, or text—update your contact info to receive them. Fees match issuance: $32 for a standard Class D license.​
Alternate every-other-cycle: if you renewed remotely last time, go in-person next.​
Special Rules for Seniors 75+
Drivers 75+ renew every five years, not eight, and must visit a DMV center in-person—no online or mail options. This “Shifting Gears: Keeping the Drive at 75” policy ensures regular checks.
Expect a free DMV vision screening or submit a recent report (Form Med 4) from an eye doctor within 90 days. Failure means no renewal.
No routine knowledge or road tests required unless medically flagged.​
Step-by-Step Renewal Process
Follow these for seniors:
- Schedule via dmv.virginia.gov or walk-in.
- Bring ID, proof of legal presence/residency if needed.
- Pass vision test.
- Pay fees, get photo.
- Receive five-year license.
REAL ID upgrades require in-person too, with extra docs like SSN proof.​
Vision Screening Details
DMV tests visual acuity (20/40 minimum) and fields. If glasses/contacts needed, restrictions apply.
Outside exams: Optometrist completes Med 4 form—accepted if dated recently. Common issues like cataracts may prompt medical reviews.​
Medical Reviews and Restrictions
DMV may require a doctor’s fitness statement for conditions like dementia or epilepsy. This could lead to shorter terms, knowledge/road tests, or restrictions like daytime-only driving.​
Sex offender registry mandates five-year renewals too, overlapping with age rules.​
Report unsafe drivers anonymously via DMV Medical Review.​
Fees and License Validity
| Category | Renewal Period | Fee (Class D) | In-Person? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 75 | 8 years | $32 | Optional |
| 75+ | 5 years | $32 | Required |
| REAL ID | Same as above | +$6 first-time | Yes ​ |
No fee discounts for seniors.​
Online and Mail: Not for Seniors
Under-75 drivers: Online if U.S. citizen, no tests needed, not previous online renewal. Mail via reminder notice—no cash/credit cards.
Seniors ineligible—must appear personally.​
Comparison to Other States
Virginia’s rules are moderate:
| State | Renewal for 75+ | Vision Test | In-Person? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Virginia | 5 years | Every renewal | Yes ​ |
| Illinois | 2-1 years (81+) | Every renewal | Often ​ |
| California | 5 years | 70+ every | Optional ​ |
| Florida | 6 years | 80+ every | Yes 80+ |
VA emphasizes vision over full retesting.
Tips for Smooth Renewal
- Book early—appointments fill fast.
- Update address beforehand.
- Practice vision if borderline.
- Consider mature driver courses for discounts/refreshers.
Expired over a year? Retake knowledge/road tests regardless of age.​
Families: Encourage checkups; report concerns ethically.
Recent Changes and 2026 Outlook
No major 2025-2026 updates; rules stable since 2015 shift from 80+ to 75+.
DMV pushes REAL ID compliance by May 2027—plan ahead.
Virginia balances independence with safety for seniors. Renew promptly to avoid hassles.
Sources
- (https://www.dmv.virginia.gov/licenses-ids/mature)
- (https://www.dmv.virginia.gov/licenses-ids/license/renewing)
- (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cousin_marriage_law_in_the_United_States)
- (https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/virginia-driving-laws-seniors-older-drivers.html)
- (https://www.abcdrivingcourse.com/blog/virginia-drivers-license-renewal)












