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Rhode Island asking kei car owners to turn in their registration

Rhode Island asking kei car owners to turn in their registration



There are about 30 kei cars registered in Rhode Island, according to DMV records, and lawmakers want to take them all off the road. State officials have started asking kei car owners to turn in their registration, which would make the vehicles illegal to drive on a public road.

Rhode Island policymakers first floated the idea of banning kei cars in 2021, and they launched a second offensive earlier in 2024. DMV administrator Walter Craddock argued that kei cars should be banned from driving on the Ocean State's roads because they "were never manufactured in compliance with Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards." Federal law allows any vehicle that's at least 25 years old to be legally imported to the United States, but each state has the power to decide what motorists are and aren't allowed to drive on its roads.

While a lot of the talk surrounding the ban has focused on trucks, such as the Honda Acty (pictured), lawmakers are targeting any kind of kei vehicle. If you want to register, say, a Suzuki Cappuccino or an Autozam AZ-1 in Rhode Island, you'll soon be out of luck. There might be a dim, flickering light at the end of the tunnel, however. Rhode Island senator Lou DiPalma and District 71 representative Michelle McGaw proposed legislation that would allow enthusiasts who registered a kei vehicle before August 1, 2021, to legally keep their car on the road.