The Bihar Transport Department has blacklisted Registration Certificates of vehicles with long-pending e-challans
Non-compliant vehicles found on the road now risk seizure, with two-wheelers making up most flagged cases in Patna
Owning a vehicle in Bihar just got a little more complicated for those who have been quietly ignoring their traffic fines. The state's Transport Department has rolled out a fresh enforcement drive that targets vehicle owners sitting on unpaid e-challans, and the consequences this time go well beyond another reminder text.
What The New Rule Means For Vehicle Owners
The department has begun blacklisting the Registration Certificates of vehicles linked to long-pending e-challans. In practical terms, this means owners can no longer treat outstanding fines as background noise.
Once an RC is blacklisted, the vehicle becomes liable for seizure if it is found on the road without the dues being cleared. The list of blacklisted vehicles has already been shared with the Traffic Police to help with enforcement on the ground.
Scale Of Pending Challans Across The State
The numbers paint a fairly stark picture. More than two lakh e-challans for traffic violations remain unpaid across Bihar at present.
In Patna district alone, roughly 35,000 vehicle RCs have already been blacklisted, and officials say district-wise lists are being prepared to add nearly one lakh more vehicles to the list statewide.
Some of these pending challans go back seven to eight years, with several vehicles carrying five or more unpaid fines despite repeated notices from the department over the years.
How The Blacklisting Process Has Worked
District Transport Officers carried out the blacklisting in two phases after owners failed to respond to earlier notices.
Once a vehicle's RC is blacklisted, it cannot avail any registration-related services until the dues are cleared, putting a practical brake on transfers, renewals, and similar paperwork until the slate is wiped clean.
Two-Wheelers Dominate The List In Patna
Of the 35,000 vehicles blacklisted in Patna district, close to 29,000 are two-wheelers, a figure that says a fair bit about where everyday traffic indiscipline tends to concentrate.
The violations behind these pending challans include riding without a helmet, travelling on the wrong side of the road, pillion riders skipping helmets, and overspeeding, the sort of everyday lapses that rarely feel urgent in the moment but add up quickly on paper.
What Happens Next
The Transport Department has urged owners to settle their dues without further delay to avoid having their vehicles seized and facing additional legal trouble.
Officials have also indicated that similar enforcement drives will be extended to other districts across Bihar in the coming weeks, suggesting this is the start of a wider push rather than a one-off exercise confined to the state capital.
For now, the message from the department is fairly plain. Pending challans are no longer just a line item to be dealt with eventually. They carry the real risk of a vehicle being taken off the road altogether.
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