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Guide

Thank you for choosing the European Driving Licence Guide

Get clear, reliable information about European driving licence requirements, licence categories, licence conversion rules, and legal driving regulations for professional drivers.

Our guide helps drivers, transport companies, and recruiters understand licence eligibility, licence categories, required documents, and the legal process for obtaining or converting a driving licence in Europe.

Whether you are applying for a new European driving licence, converting a foreign licence, or upgrading to a truck or bus licence category, this guide provides the essential information.

The European Driving Licence: Complete Guide to Recognition, Exchange & Compliance Across the EEA

Quick Answer: What Is the European Driving Licence? The European driving licence is the standardised, credit card-style official document issued across all 27 EU member states and three EFTA member states — Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway. Governed by EU Directive 2006/126/EC, it replaced more than 110 national licence formats previously in use across the European Economic Area. It is mutually recognised across all participating countries, making it the most widely accepted driving authorisation document in Europe.

What Is the European Driving Licence?

The European driving licence is a single, harmonised document that replaced the vast and inconsistent patchwork of plastic and paper driving licences previously issued individually by each country across the European Economic Area. Before harmonisation, more than 110 different licence formats were in circulation among approximately 300 million drivers — creating significant and recurring challenges for cross-border recognition, fraud prevention, and roadside enforcement across the continent.

The primary objective behind introducing a unified European licence was clear and practical: reduce the risk of fraud and ensure that every driving licence issued anywhere in the EEA could be immediately recognised, read, and verified anywhere else within the EEA. The result is a compact, credit card-sized document that incorporates a photograph of the holder, standardised, numbered data fields for cross-language identification, and security features that make the document extremely difficult to counterfeit or falsify.

The European driving licence is not merely an administrative convenience — it is a legally binding authorisation document underpinned by EU directives and enforced across all participating member states. For professional drivers working across EU borders, it is the foundational document on which all commercial driving entitlements depend.

Why the European Driving Licence Was Introduced

The harmonisation of driving licences across the European Economic Area was driven by three interconnected and mutually reinforcing policy objectives that became increasingly pressing as cross-border mobility within the EU expanded.

The first objective was fraud prevention. A fragmented system of over 110 different national licence formats — varying in size, material, layout, language, and security features — created significant opportunities for document fraud that a single, highly secure, standardised format could substantially eliminate. The credit card-style European licence incorporates sophisticated security features specifically designed to resist counterfeiting and detect forgery at enforcement checks.

The second objective was mutual recognition. Before harmonisation, enforcement officers, employers, and authorities across the EEA regularly encountered driving licences they could not reliably read, interpret, or verify. A standardised numbered field system — identical across all participating countries, regardless of the issuing state's language — directly and practically resolved this problem.

The third objective was driver mobility. The European single market depends on the free movement of workers. For professional drivers, the ability to move between member states without administrative re-qualification barriers is essential to both individual career development and the functioning of the EU road transport labour market.

Legal Framework: The EU Directives Governing the European Driving Licence

The European driving licence is the product of several decades of progressive legislative development within the European Union, building from an initial framework of mutual recognition to a fully harmonised single-document system.

Council Directive 80/1263/EE4 December 1980. The first step towards a European driving licence was taken when the Council of Ministers adopted this directive, which established a Community model national licence and guaranteed the mutual recognition of national licences between member states. It also introduced the principle of licence exchange for holders moving from one member state to another — a principle that remains central to the framework today.

Council Directive 91/439/EE, 29 July 1991. This directive substantially advanced the harmonisation project. It required EU member states to adopt implementing legislation by 1 July 1994, with the new rules taking effect by 1 July 1996. The directive harmonised vehicle categories across member states and established two Community licence models — a paper version and a plastic card version. It introduced mandatory theory and practical tests as prerequisites for licence issue, established minimum physical and mental fitness standards for applicants, and set minimum ages for driving different vehicle types. It stipulated that licences must be issued in the member state of the holder's normal residence. The directive was incorporated into the EEA Agreement and governed driving licences across the EU and EEA until its repeal on 19 January 2013.

Directive 2006/126/EC — the Current Governing Directive. In March 2006, the Council of Ministers adopted a directive proposed by the European Commission to create a single European driving licence,e replacing all 110 different models then in existence. The European Parliament adopted the directive in December 2006, and it was published in the Official Journal of the European Union on 30 December 2006. Its provisions took full effect on 19 January 2013, at which point Directive 91/439/EEC was repealed. All driving licences issued before 19 January 2013 across the EEA will become invalid by 2033 as part of the managed transition to the unified format.

Where Is the European Driving Licence Valid?

A driving licence issued by any EEA member state is recognised and valid throughout the entire European Economic Area — covering all 27 EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway — for as long as the licence remains valid, provided that the holder is of the minimum age required to drive the relevant vehicle category in the country of use, and that the licence has not been suspended, restricted, or revoked by the issuing country.

This mutual recognition is a legally binding obligation on all EEA member states under Directive 2006/126/EC — it is not a discretionary arrangement. No EEA member state may refuse to recognise a valid driving licence issued by another EEA member state, except where specific grounds for non-recognition apply under the directive.

Important Exception for Converted Licences: Drivers holding an EEA driving licence that was itself issued in exchange for a non-EEA foreign licence — rather than obtained through the standard EEA qualification process — should not automatically assume their licence will be recognised when moving to another EEA country. A converted licence may need to be converted again in the new country of residence. Drivers in this situation should verify the recognition position with the national licensing authority in their new country of residence before assuming continued validity.

Exchanging a European Driving Licence Between EEA Member States

When a holder of an EEA driving licence moves permanently to another EEA country, the licence may be exchanged for one issued by the national authority of the new country of residence. However, because all EEA driving licences are mutually recognised throughout the EEA, it is generally not necessary to exchange a valid licence before it expires — the existing licence remains legally valid for driving in the new country of residence until its stated expiry date.

When exchange is required or advisable:

  • When the existing licence is approaching or has reached its expiry date, renewal must be processed in the new country of residence.
  • When the holder wishes to hold a licence issued by their current country of residence for administrative or identification purposes
  • Where the licence was originally issued in exchange for a non-EEA licence,e and the new country of residence requires re-conversion

The exchange process: The driver surrenders their existing EEA licence to the national licensing authority of their new country of residence, which then issues an equivalent licence covering the same vehicle categories. The surrendered licence is returned to the issuing authority of the original country. The exchange does not require re-examination or re-testing — it is an administrative procedure, not a re-qualification process.

Format and Numbered Data Fields of the European Driving Licence

The European driving licence is a credit card-style, single plastic-coated document designed to be extremely difficult to counterfeit. Each data field on the document is identified by a standardised number, allowing enforcement officers, employers, and authorities across all EEA countries to locate and read specific information regardless of the language in which the licence is issued. A legend on the reverse of the card identifies each field in the issuing authority's language.

The standardised numbered fields are:

  • Field 1 — Surname of the holder
  • Field 2 — Other names of the holder
  • Field 3 — Date and place of birth
  • Field 4a — Date of issue of the licence
  • Field 4b — Date of expiry of the licence
  • Field 4c — Issuing authority
  • Field 4d — Administrative number (different from the licence number in field 5)
  • Field 5 — Licence number
  • Field 6 — Photograph of the holder
  • Field 7 — Signature of the holder
  • Field 8 — Address of the holder (included by some EU member states)
  • Field 9 — Vehicle categories for which the licence is valid
  • Field 10 — First date of issue for each category
  • Field 11 — Expiry date for each category
  • Field 12 — Restriction codes and additional information codes
  • Field 13 — Space reserved for information entered by the host member state
  • Field 14 — Space reserved for information entered by the issuing member state

Field 12 — Restriction and Information Codes: Codes 01 to 99 in field 12 are standardised and valid across the EU. Codes 100 and above are national codes, valid only for driving within the country that issued the licence. Field 12 is used to record additional conditions, restrictions, and authorisations—including the Code 95 professional driver qualification —which appears in this field alongside the relevant vehicle category (for example, C 95 or CE 95). One of the most common entries in field 13 is the code indicating that the driver must wear glasses or contact lenses while driving.

Validity Periods by Driving Licence Category

The European driving licence is issued with defined administrative validity periods that vary by vehicle category. Directive 2006/126/EC sets the framework, and member states may apply shorter validity periods within their national implementing legislation.

Licence Category

Standard Validity Period

AM, A1, A2, A

10 years (varies by member state)

B, B1, BE

10–15 years (varies by member state)

C1, C, C1E, CE

5 years

D1, D, D1E, DE

5 years

For professional vehicle categories C and D and their subcategories, renewal after five years requires submission of a current medical certificate confirming the holder's continued fitness to drive in the relevant category. Several member states apply progressively shorter validity periods for older professional drivers, with additional medical checks required from specified ages and annual reviews typically required from age 65 onwards.

Some member states also offer the option to include a microchip oninhe licence card that contains additional information about the cardholder.

Minimum Age Requirements for EU Driving Licence Categories

The EU driving licence directive establishes minimum age thresholds for each vehicle category. Member states may set higher minimum ages under their national legislation, but may not set lower ones—except where specific accompanied or supervised driving schemes are approved.

Category

Standard Minimum Age

Reduced Age Option

AM

16 years

—

A1

16 years

—

A2

18 years

—

A

24 years

20 years (with A2 held for 2 years)

B

18 years

17 years (accompanied driving — selected member states)

C

21 years

18 years (witha  valid Code 95)

CE

21 years

18 years (with a valid Code 95)

D

24 years

21 years (with valid Code 95)

D1

21 years

—

National variations exist across member states. Germany and the Netherlands permit accompanied driving from age 17. Austria allows it from 17 after 3,000 km under supervision. Iceland permits accompanied driving from the age of 16. Sweden, Finland, and Ireland set the Category B minimum at 18, with no reduction for accompanied driving.

On 21 October 2025, the European Parliament approved the creation of a standardised European digital driving licence, valid throughout the EU. The digital licence conforms to the internationally recognised ISO/IEC 18013-5 standard and is compatible with the upcoming EU Digital Identity Wallet under eIDAS 2.0.

This approval represents a landmark development in European driving licence policy. The new standardised digital licence differs fundamentally from the mobile driving licence apps introduced by individual member states in recent years. Country-specific mobile licence apps — currently available in Austria, Denmark, France, Greece, Iceland, Norway, Poland, Portugal, and Spain — use proprietary implementations and are valid only within their issuing country. Norway was the first EEA country to launch a nationwide mobile driving licence in July 2019, following a limited trial in Finland between 2018 and 2020.

The EU-standardised digital licence will be universally valid across all member states, addressing the cross-border limitation of current national mobile implementations.

The 2023 European Commission Modernisation Proposal included:

  • Creation of the EU-wide digital driving licence
  • Full digitalisation of all licence renewal, replacement, and exchange procedures
  • Lowering the minimum age for obtaining a driving licence for cars and lorries to 17 years old

These measures are subject to the standard EU legislative procedure and will come into effect only after formal adoption.

The European Driving Licence and the United Kingdom

Directive 2006/126/EC applied to the United Kingdom until the Brexit transition period ended on 31 December 2020, during which EU law continued to apply in full.

F1 January 2021, the following rules apply:

  • European EEA driving licences are recognised in Great Britain where the driving test was passed in an EU or EEA country.
  • Both visitors and residents of Great Britain can use an EEA licencein
  • EEA licences can be exchanged for a UK driving licence
  • UK driving licences can be used when visiting EU and EEA countries, subject to some exceptions.
  • An International Driving Permit may be required in some EEA countries,s depending on which international convention that country has ratified — either the 1949 Geneva Convention or the 1968 Vienna Convention.
  • No EEA country currently requires an International Driving Permit for visitors staying fewer than 12 months.

Switzerland and the European Driving Licence Framework

Although Switzerland is an EFTA member state, it is not a contracting party to the EEA Agreement. It therefore does not participate in the European driving licence system under Directive 2006/126/EC. Switzerland is instead linked to the EU through a series of bilateral agreements and has broadly adopted much of the harmonised EU driving legislation. Switzerland uses vehicle categories closely comparable to the EU system and issues credit card-style licences similar in format to EEA licences, making Swiss licences visually and practically comparable to the European standard despite their different legal basis.

French Overseas Territories and the European Licence

French Overseas Collectivities and Territories are not part of the EEA despite forming part of the French Republic. However, with limited exceptions, most French Overseas Collectivities have followed EU harmonisation standards and adopted the EEA model licence format. Saint Pierre and Miquelon uses standard French driving licences. Wallis and Futuna is the last remaining French territory still issuing non-credit card-sized licences. As of May 2024, Saint Martin is the only French territory that is an EU member but uses a different format from the current French standard.

EU Driving Licence Recognition for Professional Truck Drivers

For professional truck drivers and bus drivers operating commercially across the European Economic Area, the European driving licence is more than an identification document — it is the legal foundation of their professional driving entitlement. The mutual recognition framework eliminates the need for re-examination or licence conversion when moving between member states for employment, providing the free movement of professional driving qualifications that the EU transport labour market depends upon.

Professional drivers must hold the correct category entitlement for the vehicle they operate commercially. The primary categories relevant to professional drivers are:

  • Category C — rigid goods vehicles with a maximum authorised mass exceeding 3,500 kg
  • Category CE — articulated HGVs and truck-and-trailer combinations
  • Category C1 — goods vehicles between 3,500 kg and 7,500 kg
  • Category D — buses and coaches designed to carry more than eight passengers
  • Category D1 — minibuses designed to carry between nine and sixteen passengers

All commercial use of these categories additionally requires a valid Code 95 professional driver qualification, which is recorded in field 12 of the driving licence or on a separate Driver Qualification Card. The driving licence and Code 95 are legally independent requirements that must both be current and valid simultaneously for every commercial journey.

Key Facts: The European Driving Licence at a Glance

  • Issued by all 27 EU member states and 3 EFTA states — Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway
  • Replaced over 110 different national licence formats across the EEA
  • Introduced to reduce fraud and enable mutual recognition across all EEA countries
  • Governed by EU Directive 2006/126/EC as of 19 January 2013
  • Credit card-style, single plastic-coated document with standardised numbered fields
  • Mutually recognised across the entire EEA — no re-examination required between member states.
  • Professional categories C and D: valid for 5 years, renewable with a medical certificate
  • Code 95 professional qualification recorded in field 12
  • European digital driving licence approved by the European Parliament, 21 October 2025
  • All pre-2013 licences will become invalid by 2033

Overview of European Driving Licences by Member State

Member State

Validity

Issuing Authority

Latest Version

Mobile Licence

Austria

15 year11 February

 

 Feb 2014

Yes

Belgium

10 years

Federal Public Service Mobility and Transport 27 December

 Dec 2019

No

Bulgaria

5 years — C1, C, CE, D1, D1E, D, D19 January

 

 Jan 2013

No

 

10 years — AM, A1, A2, A, B, B1

 

 

 

Croatia

5 years — C1, C1E, C, CE, D1, D1E, D, DE, H

—

2023

No

 

10 years — AM, A1, A2, A, B, BE, F, G

 

 

 

Cyprus

5 years — C, CE, D, DE, D1, D1E, 1 July

 

 Jul 2013

No

 

15 years — A, A1, A2, B, B1, BE, C1, C1E

 

 

 

Czech Republic

 

19 January

 Jan 2013

No

Denmark

15 year1 September

 

 Sep 2017

Yes — proprietary app, launched Nov 2020

Estonia

5 years — C, 19 January

 

 Jan 2013

No

 

10 years — all other categories

 

 

 

Finland

2–15 years (depending on category and age)

Trafi1 April

 Apr 2019

Trial only — terminated 2018–2020

Åland (Finland)

2–15 years (depending on category and age)

Åland Provincial Government 1 April

 Apr 2019

Trial only — terminated 2018–2020

France

1–5 years — C1, C, C1E, CE, D1, D, D1E, DE (age-dependent medical check)

Prefecture via A1 July

 Jul 2015

No

 

15 years — AM, A1, A2, A, B1, B, BE

 

 

 

Saint Martin (France)

—

Collectivity of Saint Martin

Mar 2015

No

Germany

15 years

Local driving licence author4 January

 Jan 2021

Yes — proprietary app launched 2022 (supplementary only, no legal validity)

Greece

15 years up to age 65 — B and non-professional categories

Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport, 4 July

 Jul 2023

Yes — proprietary app launched Jul 2023

 

3 years age 65–80 — B and non-professional

 

 

 

 

2 years above age 80 — B and non-professional

 

 

 

 

5 years up to age 65 — C1, C1E, C, CE, D1, D1E, D, DE (with medical check)

 

 

 

 

3 years age 65–80 — professional categories

 

 

 

 

2 years above age 80 — professional categories

 

 

 

Hungary

10 years up to age 519 January

 

 Jan 2013

No

 

5 years age 50–60

 

 

 

 

3 years old, 60–70

 

 

 

 

2 years above age 70

 

 

 

Iceland

3 years — first licence

Sheriffs on behalf of Icelandic Transport Author3 June

 Jun 2013

Yes — proprietary .pkpass app launched Jul 2020

 

15 years up to age 70

 

 

 

 

4 years at age 70

 

 

 

 

3 years at age 71

 

 

 

 

2 years age 72–79

 

 

 

 

1 year above age 80

 

 

 

Ireland

10 years

Road Safety Author28 February

 Feb 2017

No

Italy

10 years — AM, A1, A2, A, B1, B, BE

Ministry of Infrastructure andTransport, 199 January

 Jan 2013

Yes — proprietary app

 

5 years — holders aged 50–69

 

 

 

 

3 years — holders above age 70

 

 

 

Latvia

5 years — C1, C1E, D1, D1E, C, CE, D, DE

Road Safety Director2 January

 Jan 2013

No

 

10 years — all other categories

 

 

 

Liechtenstein

 

1 April

 Apr 2019

No

Lithuania

10 years

—

30 Jul 2021

No

Luxembourg

 

19 January

 Jan 2013

No

Malta

 

19 December

 Dec 2003

No

Netherlands

10 years up to age 65

 

14 November Nov 2014

No

 

Until age 75 if renewed between age 65–70

 

 

 

 

5 years at age 71

 

 

 

Norway

15 years

Norwegian Public Roads Administration 1 March

 Mar 2023

Yes — proprietary app launched Oct 2019

Poland

15 years

Starosta or city ma4 March

 Mar 2019

No

Portugal

—

Instituto da Mobilidade e dos Transportes (I2 January

 Jan 2013

No

Romania

5 years — C1, C1E, C, CE, D1, D1E, D, D19 January

 

 Jan 2013

No

 

10 years — AM, A1, A, B, B1, BE

 

 

 

Slovakia

—

—

15 September 2015

No

Slovenia

 

19 January

 Jan 2013

No

Spain

10 years up to age 65

Directorate-General for Traf19 January

 Jan 2013

No

 

5 years above age 65

 

 

 

Sweden

10 years — AM, A1, A2, A, B, BE

Swedish Transport Age21 January

 Jan 2016

No

 

5 years — C1, C1E, C, CE, D1, D1E, D, DE

 

 

 

Notes:

  • Validity periods for professional categories C and D generally require a medical certificate at renewal.
  • The mobile driving licence apps listed above use proprietary national implementations and are valid only in their issuing country.y
  • The EU-standardised European digital driving licence — approved by the European Parliament on 21 October 2025 — will be universally valid across all member states upon implementation.
  • All licences issued before 19 January 2013 across the EEA will become invalid by 2033

Important Disclaimer

I'm sharing the information in this guide for general educational and informational purposes. It does not constitute legal advice and must not be relied upon as a substitute for specific professional legal, regulatory, or compliance advice tailored to individual circumstances. EU driving licence regulations are subject to regular legislative updates and variations in national implementation across member states. Please verify all current requirements with the relevant national licensing authority or a qualified transport compliance professional before making any operational or legal decisions.

Official Government References

  • European Commission – Mobility and Transport: Official guidance on EU driving licences and road transport regulations — https://transport.ec.europa.eu
  • EU Directive 2006/126/EC (EUR-Lex): Full official legal text of the EU driving licence directive — https://eur-lex.europa.eu
  • European Labour Authority (ELA): Cross-border enforcement and guidance for mobile workers — https://ela.europa.eu

Author — FastDriver.eu

FastDriver.eu provides practical, accurate guidance and professionally structured information for professional truck drivers and transport operators working across Europe. The content covers EU driving licence requirements, tachograph compliance, Code 95 qualification, driving hours rules, and industry insights to help drivers and operators maintain full legal compliance across all EU member states.

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