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🇹🇷Complete Guide 2026Updated March 2026

Turkish Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide

Everything you need to know about getting your driving licence in Turkey — MEB theory test format, driving school costs, speed limits, traffic fines, the 100-point penalty system, and the 25% early payment discount.

81
Provinces
50
Test Questions
6,352
Road Deaths (2024)
70%
Pass Mark
81 ProvincesFee BreakdownSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesLicence Categories
Copy

6,352

Road deaths in Turkey (2024)

~7.7 per 100K — well above EU average

Copy

~7.7/100K

Deaths per 100,000 inhabitants

EU average: ~4.5/100K — Turkey significantly higher

Copy

25%

Early payment discount on ALL fines

Pay within 15 days — applies to every traffic fine

Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution

Key Findings

Theory TestMEB / Turkish Traffic Code

50 multiple-choice questions (12 first aid, 23 traffic & environment, 9 motor technique, 6 traffic etiquette), 35/50 to pass (70%), 45 minutes. Paper-based at MEB (Ministry of Education) centers. Must not score zero in any section.

Total CostEGM / Driving Schools

Approximately 15,000–25,000 TRY (~€500–1,000) total. Highly volatile due to inflation. Driving school 10,000–20,000 TRY, health report 1,000–2,500 TRY, exams ~2,000 TRY, licence fee ~3,000 TRY.

Road DeathsEGM / TÜİK

6,352 fatalities in 2024 (~7.7 per 100K inhabitants) — among the highest in Europe. Down 3% from 6,548 in 2023, but still well above the EU average of ~4.5/100K.

BAC LimitTurkish Traffic Code

0.50‰ (0.05%) for general drivers. ZERO tolerance (0.00‰) for commercial vehicle drivers and novice drivers. 0.20‰ for motorcycle riders. Penalties include 9,267 TRY fine + 6-month licence suspension for first offence.

Fines & PointsTurkish Traffic Code

Turkey uses a 100-point penalty system — you start with 100 and lose points for violations. At 0 points, licence is suspended. All fines adjusted annually by inflation (43.93% in 2025). 25% early payment discount if paid within 15 days.

Global ContextWHO / European Commission / TÜİK

Turkey's death rate of ~7.7/100K exceeds Germany (3.4), France (4.8), and UK (2.5), though lower than Romania (8.1). Licence cost (15,000–25,000 TRY / €500–1,000) is moderate but rapidly changing due to inflation.

Turkey Road Safety: 6-Year Trend (2019–2024)

According to EGM and TÜİK data, road fatalities in Turkey decreased from 5,473 in 2019 to {deaths} in 2024. After a COVID-19 dip in 2020 (4,866), deaths rose sharply in 2023 (6,548) before declining 3% in 2024. Turkey's rate of ~7.7 deaths per 100K remains well above the EU average of ~4.5.

2019
5.473
2020
4.866
(COVID-19 lockdowns)
2021
5.362
2022
5.229
2023
6.548
2024
6.352

Year-over-year changes

2019→2020

-11.1%

2020→2021

+10.2%

2021→2022

-2.5%

2022→2023

+25.2%

2023→2024

-3.0%

Deaths per 100,000 Population

🇷🇴Romania
8.1
🇹🇷Turkey
7.3
🇫🇷France
4.8
🇩🇪Germany
3.4
🇬🇧UK
2.5

Source: EGM, TÜİK, European Commission Road Safety Data, WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.

Table of Contents

Road Safety DataTheory Test FormatLicence ProcessFeesLicence CategoriesSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesImportant RulesRoad HazardsProvincesEmergency NumbersMisconceptionsRecent ChangesGlobal ComparisonFAQSourcesCite This Page
MEB Exam

Turkish Theory Test Format#

The paper-based theory test is administered by MEB (Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı — Ministry of National Education) at designated examination centers

The Turkish driving theory test (ehliyet sınavı) for Category B consists of 50 multiple-choice questions divided into 4 sections: 12 first aid questions, 23 traffic and environment questions, 9 motor technique questions, and 6 traffic etiquette questions. To pass, you need at least 35 correct answers out of 50 (70%). Crucially, you must not score zero in any individual section — even if your total is above 35. You have 45 minutes to complete the test. The exam is paper-based and administered at MEB examination centers. Results are available within 30 minutes.

Questions

50 Qs

4 sections, must pass each

Duration

45 Min

Total exam time

Pass Mark

70%

35 of 50 correct

Exam Fee

~1,000 TRY

~€25 theory exam

What the Theory Test Covers

Traffic & Environment (23 Qs)
  • Traffic signs (trafik işaretleri) & signals
  • Priority rules (geçiş hakkı kuralları)
  • Speed limits (hız sınırları)
  • Pedestrian & school zone rules
  • Roundabout priority (EU standard — inside has priority)
First Aid (12 Qs)
  • Bleeding control & wound treatment
  • CPR and recovery position
  • Fracture immobilization
  • Shock management
  • Emergency scene safety
Motor Technique & Etiquette (15 Qs)
  • Engine & transmission basics (9 motor questions)
  • Vehicle maintenance & safety systems
  • Driving courtesy & etiquette (6 etiquette questions)
  • Motorway & tunnel driving rules
  • 100-point penalty system (ceza puanı)
MEB Official PortalPractice Theory Questions Free
Step by Step

How to Get Your Turkish Driving Licence#

From health report to ehliyet — the complete 6-step process

1

Get Health Report (Sağlık Raporu)

Obtain a medical fitness report from an authorized hospital or clinic

1,000–2,500 TRY. Includes eye test, general health check, and psychological fitness assessment. Valid for 6 months.

2

Complete First Aid Course

Attend a mandatory first aid training course

Usually included in driving school package. First aid accounts for 12 of 50 theory questions — the largest single section.

3

Enrol at a Driving School (Sürücü Kursu)

Register at a licensed sürücü kursu (driving school)

Driving school package 10,000–20,000 TRY. Includes theory classes and practical driving lessons. Prices vary significantly by city and inflation.

4

Pass MEB Theory Exam

Take and pass the theory exam at a MEB examination center

50 questions, 35/50 to pass (70%), 45 min. Paper-based exam. Must not score zero in any section. Fee: ~1,000 TRY. Results in 30 minutes.

5

Pass Practical Driving Test (Direksiyon Sınavı)

Pass the practical driving test with an authorized examiner

Real traffic driving test including parking, manoeuvres, and traffic navigation. Fee: ~1,000 TRY. Conducted by authorized driving school examiners.

6

Get Your Licence (Ehliyet) at Emniyet

Apply for your driving licence at the local Emniyet (Police) office

Licence issuance fee: ~3,000 TRY. Digital licence also available via e-Devlet (government portal) since 2024. Card delivered to your address.

Cost Breakdown

Turkish Driving Licence Fees#

Total cost typically 15,000–25,000 TRY (~€500–1,000) — highly volatile due to annual inflation adjustments

Health report (sağlık raporu)1,000–2,500 TRY
Driving school (sürücü kursu — full package)10,000–20,000 TRY
Theory exam fee (MEB)~1,000 TRY
Practical exam fee (direksiyon sınavı)~1,000 TRY
Licence issuance fee (Emniyet)~3,000 TRY
Additional practical lessons (per hour)500–1,500 TRY
Total Typical (Category B)15,000–25,000 TRY

All costs are approximate and subject to significant change due to Turkey's high inflation rate. Fees are adjusted annually. Istanbul and Ankara tend to be more expensive than other cities. The 2025 inflation adjustment was 43.93%.

Categories

Licence Categories & Minimum Age

M — Mopeds up to 50cc / 45 km/h

16

years

A1 — Motorcycles up to 125cc / 11 kW

16 years; 17 with parental consent

16

years

B1 — Light quadricycles

16

years

A2 — Motorcycles up to 35 kW

18

years

B — Cars up to 3,500 kg

Most common category

18

years

F — Agricultural vehicles (tractor)

18

years

C — Trucks over 3,500 kg

21

years

A — Motorcycles unlimited

24 years, or 20 with 2 years A2 experience

24

years

D — Buses (8+ passengers)

24

years

Licence Validity Periods

Standard (M / A / B)

Medical report required at every renewal

10 years
Professional (C / D)

Medical report required at every renewal

5 years

Novice Driver Restrictions

  • 0.00‰ BAC — ZERO tolerance for novice drivers (general drivers: 0.50‰)
  • 100-point penalty system starts at 100 — lose points for each violation
  • Must complete mandatory first aid training
  • Professional categories (C/D) require minimum age 21/24
  • Digital licence available via e-Devlet since 2024

100-Point Penalty System (Ceza Puanı Sistemi)

  • All drivers start with 100 penalty points
  • Points are deducted for traffic violations (10–30 points per offence)
  • When points reach 0, driving licence is suspended
  • Points are restored gradually over time with clean driving
  • 5 speeding violations over 30% above limit within a year = 1-year suspension (2025)
  • 25% early payment discount on fines if paid within 15 days
Speed Limits

Speed Limits in Turkey#

As per Turkish Traffic Code (Karayolları Trafik Kanunu) — all speeds in km/h

Turkey has five main speed limit tiers: urban areas (50 km/h, school zones 30 km/h), undivided intercity roads (90 km/h), divided intercity roads (110 km/h), state motorways (130 km/h), and BOT private motorways (up to 140 km/h). Trucks face lower limits: 80/80/90 km/h. Buses: 80/90/100 km/h. The minimum motorway speed is 40 km/h. Speed enforcement is extensive through the EDS (Elektronik Denetleme Sistemi) and TEDES camera networks covering most major roads.

Speed limits in Turkey by road type and vehicle category, in km/h. Source: Turkish Traffic Code.
Road TypeCarsTrucksBusesNote
Şehir içi (Urban area)505050School zones: 30 km/h
Bölünmemiş yol (Undivided intercity)908080
Bölünmüş yol (Divided intercity)1108090
Otoyol — State (Motorway)13090100Minimum: 40 km/h
Otoyol — BOT Private14090100Up to 140 where posted

Şehir içi (Urban area)

50

Cars

50

Trucks

50

Buses

School zones: 30 km/h

Bölünmemiş yol (Undivided intercity)

90

Cars

80

Trucks

80

Buses

Bölünmüş yol (Divided intercity)

110

Cars

80

Trucks

90

Buses

Otoyol — State (Motorway)

130

Cars

90

Trucks

100

Buses

Minimum: 40 km/h

Otoyol — BOT Private

140

Cars

90

Trucks

100

Buses

Up to 140 where posted

Turkey's motorway network includes both state-operated (130 km/h max) and privately operated BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer) motorways (up to 140 km/h where posted). Speed enforcement uses EDS (Elektronik Denetleme Sistemi) fixed cameras and TEDES mobile cameras. HGS electronic toll is required for all motorways.

Traffic Fines

Traffic Fines & Penalties (2025)#

All fines adjusted annually by inflation (43.93% in 2025). 25% early payment discount within 15 days.

Turkey's traffic fine system is adjusted annually based on the revaluation rate (yeniden değerleme oranı), which was 43.93% in 2025. This means all fines increase significantly year over year. A 25% early payment discount applies if fines are paid within 15 days. Turkey uses a 100-point penalty system — drivers start with 100 points and lose points for violations. At 0 points, the licence is suspended. Drug driving carries the highest fine at 47,842 TRY.

Traffic fines and penalties in Turkey (2025). Amounts in Turkish Lira (TRY), adjusted annually by inflation.
ViolationFine (TRY)PointsNotes
Speeding 10–30% over limit2,167 TRY1025% discount if paid in 15 days
Speeding 30–50% over limit4,512 TRY1525% discount if paid in 15 days
Speeding >50% over limit9,267 TRY15Licence suspension possible
Running a red light2,167 TRY152026: graduated penalties up to 10,000 TRY
Mobile phone use while driving2,167 TRY102026: graduated 5,000/10,000/suspension
No seatbelt (emniyet kemeri)993 TRY102026: increasing to 2,500 TRY
DUI — 1st offence (>0.50‰ BAC)9,267 TRY206-month licence suspension
DUI — 2nd offence18,677 TRY—2-year licence suspension
Emergency lane misuse9,267 TRY10
Driving without licence18,677 TRY—Vehicle impounded
Drug driving47,842 TRY—Licence revocation + criminal charges
Ignoring police stop signal9,267 TRY202026: up to 200,000 TRY

Speeding 10–30% over limit

2,167 TRY10 pt · 25% discount if paid in 15 days

Speeding 30–50% over limit

4,512 TRY15 pt · 25% discount if paid in 15 days

Speeding >50% over limit

9,267 TRY15 pt · Licence suspension possible

Running a red light

2,167 TRY15 pt

Mobile phone use while driving

2,167 TRY10 pt

No seatbelt (emniyet kemeri)

993 TRY10 pt

DUI — 1st offence (>0.50‰ BAC)

9,267 TRY20 pt · 6-month suspension

DUI — 2nd offence

18,677 TRY · 2-year suspension

Emergency lane misuse

9,267 TRY10 pt

Driving without licence

18,677 TRY · Vehicle impounded

Drug driving

47,842 TRY · Licence revocation

Ignoring police stop signal

9,267 TRY20 pt

All fines shown are 2025 amounts, adjusted by 43.93% from 2024. A 25% early payment discount applies if paid within 15 days. The 100-point penalty system deducts points per offence — at 0 points, licence is suspended. 5 speeding violations over 30% within a year triggers automatic 1-year suspension (2025 rule). Drug driving carries the highest single fine.

Know These Rules Before Your Theory Test

Traffic fines, speed limits, and BAC rules are heavily tested in the Turkish theory exam. Practice with real exam-style questions.

Start Practicing for Free
Key Rules

Important Driving Rules in Turkey

Right-Hand Traffic

Turkey drives on the right. Priority to vehicles from the right at unmarked intersections. Always keep to the right lane unless overtaking.

BAC Limits (0.50‰ / 0.00‰)

General drivers: 0.50‰ BAC limit. ZERO tolerance (0.00‰) for commercial vehicle drivers and novice drivers. Motorcycle riders: 0.20‰. First DUI offence: 9,267 TRY + 6-month suspension.

Zorunlu Trafik Sigortası (Mandatory MTPL)

Zorunlu Trafik Sigortası (mandatory motor third-party liability insurance) is required for all vehicles. Driving without valid insurance carries severe fines and vehicle impoundment.

TÜVTÜRK Vehicle Inspection (Muayene)

All vehicles must pass periodic inspection at TÜVTÜRK stations. New vehicles: first inspection after 3 years, then every 2 years until 10 years, then annually.

HGS Electronic Toll (PTT)

HGS (Hızlı Geçiş Sistemi) is the mandatory electronic toll system for all motorways and bridges. Purchase HGS stickers at PTT (post office) branches. OGS was retired in 2022.

Phone Prohibited

Using a mobile phone while driving is prohibited: 2,167 TRY fine and 10 penalty points. Hands-free systems are permitted. 2026: graduated penalties up to suspension.

Child Seats (Under 150 cm / 36 kg)

Children under 150 cm tall or under 36 kg must use an approved child restraint system. Children under 3 must always be in a rear-facing or appropriate car seat.

Mandatory Equipment

All vehicles must carry: 2 warning triangles, a fire extinguisher, a first aid kit, and a reflective safety vest. Equipment is checked during TÜVTÜRK inspection.

Headlights on Motorways & Outside Cities

Dipped headlights or daytime running lights must be on when driving on motorways and outside built-up areas, regardless of weather or time of day.

Stay Safe

Common Road Hazards in Turkey

6,352 road fatalities in 2024 — know these hazards to stay safe on Turkish roads

Dolmuş (Minibus) Stops

Dolmuş shared minibuses stop frequently and unpredictably to pick up and drop off passengers — often without pulling fully to the side, especially in urban areas

Stray Animals

Stray dogs and cats are common in both urban and rural areas — can suddenly dart into traffic. Rural roads may also have livestock crossings

Aggressive Driving

Aggressive lane changes, tailgating, and horn use are common — maintain defensive driving posture and extra following distance

Winding Mountain Roads

Mountain passes in eastern Turkey and along the Black Sea coast feature sharp turns, steep gradients, and limited guardrails — reduced speed essential

Earthquake Zone Driving

Turkey is in a major seismic zone — know post-earthquake driving protocols, avoid bridges and overpasses during tremors, stay in vehicle on open road

Heavy Truck Traffic

Intercity roads carry heavy commercial truck traffic — overtaking trucks on undivided roads is a leading cause of fatal accidents

All Regions

Turkey's 81 Provinces (İller)

Driving licence administration is handled by EGM through provincial Emniyet offices. Turkey has 81 iller (provinces). Top 10 shown by population.

Turkey's largest provinces by population with plate codes and approximate populations.
Province (İl)Plate CodePopulation
İstanbul3415.9M
Ankara065.7M
İzmir354.5M
Bursa163.1M
Antalya072.7M
Konya422.3M
Adana012.3M
Gaziantep272.2M
Şanlıurfa632.1M
Mersin331.9M
34

İstanbul

15.9M

06

Ankara

5.7M

35

İzmir

4.5M

16

Bursa

3.1M

07

Antalya

2.7M

42

Konya

2.3M

01

Adana

2.3M

27

Gaziantep

2.2M

63

Şanlıurfa

2.1M

33

Mersin

1.9M

Turkey has 81 provinces. Driving laws are national (Karayolları Trafik Kanunu), but licence issuance is administered at provincial Emniyet offices. Driving school costs vary by region — Istanbul and Ankara tend to be the most expensive. Theory exams are administered by MEB at designated centers.

Emergency

Emergency Numbers

All available 24/7. {number} is the unified emergency number (since 2022).

112

Unified Emergency (Ambulance, Fire, Police)

155

Police (Polis)

110

Fire Brigade (İtfaiye)

156

Gendarmerie (Jandarma — rural areas)

177

Forest Fire (Orman Yangını)

182

Traffic Hotline (Trafik)

Myth vs Fact

Common Misconceptions About Driving in Turkey#

Myth: Turkish drivers ignore all traffic rules

Fact: While driving culture can be assertive, Turkey has invested heavily in EDS (Elektronik Denetleme Sistemi) and TEDES camera networks that now cover most major roads. Automated enforcement has significantly improved compliance, especially on motorways.

Myth: An International Driving Permit is valid indefinitely for tourists

Fact: An IDP is valid for only 6 months for tourists in Turkey. After 6 months of residency, you must obtain a Turkish driving licence by converting your foreign licence or taking the full examination.

Myth: Speed limits are just suggestions on Turkish roads

Fact: The EDS/TEDES camera network covers most major roads and motorways. Average speed cameras calculate your speed over long stretches. 5 speeding violations over 30% within a year triggers automatic 1-year suspension (2025 rule).

Myth: Flashing headlights means 'go ahead, after you'

Fact: In Turkey, flashing headlights typically means 'I'm coming through' or 'Don't pull out' — the opposite of what many visitors assume. Always wait and confirm the other driver's intention before proceeding.

Myth: Winter tyres are not needed in Turkey

Fact: Winter tyres are mandatory for commercial vehicles on designated routes. For private cars, they are practically essential in eastern Turkey and mountain regions where heavy snow is common from November to April.

Myth: At roundabouts, entering traffic has priority

Fact: Turkey changed to the EU standard: vehicles already inside the roundabout have priority over entering traffic. However, old habits persist — approach cautiously and be prepared for drivers entering without yielding.

Timeline

Recent Changes to Turkish Driving Laws#

Key regulatory updates affecting drivers in Turkey

2026

Graduated penalties for phone, red light, seatbelt; up to ₺200,000 for ignoring police

2026 introduces graduated penalties: phone use escalates to 5,000/10,000 TRY/suspension for repeat offences. Red light violations up to 10,000 TRY. Seatbelt fines increase to 2,500 TRY. Ignoring police stop signal penalties surge to up to 200,000 TRY.

2025

All fines +43.93%, 5 speeding violations >30% = 1-year suspension

Annual inflation adjustment raised all fines by 43.93%. New rule: 5 speeding violations exceeding 30% above the limit within a single year triggers automatic 1-year licence suspension. Enhanced TEDES coverage on secondary roads.

2024

Digital licence via e-Devlet, fine restructuring +60%

Turkey launched digital driving licences accessible through the e-Devlet (government) portal. Major fine restructuring with approximately 60% increases. Enhanced camera enforcement network expanded to smaller cities.

2022

OGS retired, HGS-only toll system

The OGS (Otomatik Geçiş Sistemi) was retired in favor of HGS (Hızlı Geçiş Sistemi) as the sole electronic toll system. All motorway users must have HGS stickers, available at PTT (post office) branches.

2019

112 unified emergency system nationwide

Turkey completed the rollout of the unified 112 emergency number system nationwide, consolidating ambulance, fire, and police dispatching into a single call center. Individual service numbers (155, 110, 156) remain operational.

Global Context

How Turkey Compares Globally#

Turkey's driving regulations compared to other major countries — data compiled from official government sources

Comparison of driving regulations between Turkey, Germany, France, UK, and Romania including BAC limits, minimum age, speed limits, licence costs, and road fatality statistics.
ParameterTurkeyGermanyFranceUKRomania
BAC Limit0.50‰0.05%0.05%0.08%0.00%
Min. Age (Car)1818181718
Driving SideRightRightRightLeftRight
Motorway Speed130 km/hNo limit*130 km/h112 km/h130 km/h
Test Questions5030405026
Licence Cost20K–40K TRY€2,000–3,500€1,500–2,500£200–1,5003,100–4,700 RON
Road Deaths/yr6,3522,7703,1701,6951,545
Deaths/100K~7.33.44.82.58.1
BAC Limit0.50‰

0.00‰ for commercial/novice. Romania: 0.00% zero tolerance. Germany/France: 0.05%.

Min. Age (Car)18 years

Same as most EU countries. UK allows 17.

Motorway Speed130 km/h

BOT private motorways up to 140. Germany has no general limit.

Licence Cost15,000–25,000 TRY

~€500–1,000. Volatile due to inflation. Germany: €2,000–3,500.

Road Deaths~7.7/100K

Well above EU average (~4.5/100K). Romania highest in EU at 8.1. UK lowest at 2.5.

Road deaths: Turkey 6,352 (2024, ~7.7/100K), Germany 2,770 (3.4/100K), France 3,170 (4.8/100K), UK 1,695 (2.5/100K), Romania 1,545 (8.1/100K). Turkey BAC: 0.50‰ general, 0.00‰ commercial/novice. All fine amounts in TRY subject to annual inflation adjustment.

Fact-Checked

Sources & Methodology

Primary Sources

  • Karayolları Trafik Kanunu (Road Traffic Code) — Turkish Grand National Assembly
  • EGM — Traffic Statistics and Driving Licence Regulations — Emniyet Genel Müdürlüğü (General Directorate of Security)
  • MEB — Theory Examination Format and Schedule — Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı (Ministry of National Education)
  • TÜİK — Road Accident and Fatality Statistics — Türkiye İstatistik Kurumu (Turkish Statistical Institute)
  • European Commission — Road Safety Statistics — European Commission
  • KGM — Road Infrastructure and Speed Limit Regulations — Karayolları Genel Müdürlüğü (General Directorate of Highways)

Verification Methodology

Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:

  1. Primary data collected from official Turkish legislation (Karayolları Trafik Kanunu) and EGM publications
  2. Cross-verified against TÜİK statistics and European Commission road safety data
  3. Regional variations noted where applicable (driving school costs differ significantly by city and inflation)
  4. Page reviewed and fact-checked on {date}

If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately. Note: Turkish fine amounts change annually due to inflation adjustments.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a driving licence cost in Turkey?
The total cost for a Category B (car) licence is typically 15,000–25,000 TRY (~€500–1,000). This includes: health report 1,000–2,500 TRY, driving school 10,000–20,000 TRY, theory exam ~1,000 TRY, practical exam ~1,000 TRY, and licence fee ~3,000 TRY. Costs are highly volatile due to Turkey's high inflation — the 2025 adjustment was 43.93%.
What is the Turkish theory test (ehliyet sınavı) format?
The MEB theory exam for Category B has 50 multiple-choice questions in 4 sections: 12 first aid, 23 traffic & environment, 9 motor technique, and 6 traffic etiquette. You need 35/50 (70%) to pass. Crucially, you must not score zero in any individual section. Time limit: 45 minutes. The exam is paper-based and results are available within 30 minutes.
What is the BAC (blood alcohol) limit in Turkey?
Turkey has tiered BAC limits: 0.50‰ (0.05%) for general drivers, ZERO tolerance (0.00‰) for commercial vehicle drivers and novice drivers, and 0.20‰ for motorcycle riders. First DUI offence: 9,267 TRY fine + 6-month licence suspension. Second offence: 18,677 TRY + 2-year suspension.
How does the HGS toll system work?
HGS (Hızlı Geçiş Sistemi) is Turkey's electronic toll system, mandatory for all motorways and toll bridges (including the Bosphorus bridges). Purchase HGS stickers at PTT (post office) branches and load credit. The OGS system was retired in 2022. Driving on motorways without HGS results in fines and penalties.
What is the 100-point penalty system?
Turkish drivers start with 100 penalty points. Points are deducted for each traffic violation (10–30 points depending on severity). When your points reach 0, your licence is suspended. Points are gradually restored over time with clean driving. The system encourages careful driving — multiple minor offences can accumulate quickly.
How does first aid feature in the theory test?
First aid is a major component: 12 out of 50 questions (24%) are dedicated to first aid. Topics include bleeding control, CPR, fracture management, shock treatment, and emergency scene safety. You must complete a first aid course and cannot score zero in this section — even if your total score exceeds 70%.
What are the 2026 graduated penalty changes?
From 2026, Turkey introduces graduated penalties for repeat offences: phone use escalates from 5,000 to 10,000 TRY to suspension. Red light violations increase up to 10,000 TRY. Seatbelt fines rise to 2,500 TRY. Most dramatically, ignoring a police stop signal can carry penalties up to 200,000 TRY.
What speed limits apply in Turkish urban areas?
The general urban speed limit is 50 km/h. School zones are restricted to 30 km/h. Outside built-up areas: undivided roads 90 km/h, divided roads 110 km/h. State motorways: 130 km/h (minimum 40 km/h). BOT private motorways: up to 140 km/h where posted.
What mandatory equipment must I carry in my car in Turkey?
Turkish law requires all vehicles to carry: 2 warning triangles, a fire extinguisher, a first aid kit, and a reflective safety vest. This equipment is checked during TÜVTÜRK vehicle inspections. Missing equipment can result in fines during police roadside checks.
Can I convert my foreign driving licence in Turkey?
Tourists can drive with their national licence plus an IDP for up to 6 months. After becoming a resident, you must convert your licence. Turkey has bilateral agreements with many countries (including EU members) for direct exchange. For others, you may need to pass the theory and/or practical tests.
How long does the licence process take in Turkey?
The typical timeline from health report to receiving your ehliyet is 2–4 months. This includes: health report (1–2 days), first aid course (1–2 weeks), driving school theory + practical (6–10 weeks), theory exam scheduling (2–4 weeks), practical test scheduling (1–3 weeks), and licence card production (~2 weeks).
What is the digital driving licence (e-Ehliyet)?
Since 2024, Turkish drivers can access a digital version of their driving licence through the e-Devlet (e-Government) portal and mobile app. This digital licence is legally valid and can be shown to police during checks. The physical card is still issued and remains valid.
Are winter tyres mandatory in Turkey?
Winter tyres are mandatory for commercial vehicles on designated routes between December 1 and April 1. For private cars, they are not legally mandatory nationwide but are strongly recommended (and practically essential) in eastern Turkey and mountain areas where heavy snowfall is common.
How are Turkish fines affected by inflation?
All Turkish traffic fines are adjusted annually based on the official revaluation rate (yeniden değerleme oranı). In 2025, this rate was 43.93%, meaning all fines increased by nearly 44% compared to 2024. In 2024, the increase was approximately 60%. This annual adjustment means fine amounts change significantly every year.
What is EDS/TEDES and how does it work?
EDS (Elektronik Denetleme Sistemi) refers to fixed speed and red-light cameras. TEDES (Trafik Elektronik Denetleme Sistemi) includes mobile and average-speed cameras. Together they form an extensive automated enforcement network covering most major roads. Fines are automatically generated and sent to the vehicle owner.

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APA 7th Edition

AutoviaTest. (2026, March 24). Turkish driving licence facts 2026 — MEB test, driving school costs, fines & rules. https://autoviatest.com/en/driving-test/turkey/facts

MLA 9th Edition

AutoviaTest. "Turkish Driving Licence Facts 2026 — MEB Test, Driving School Costs, Fines & Rules." AutoviaTest, 24 Mar. 2026, autoviatest.com/en/driving-test/turkey/facts.

Chicago 17th Edition

AutoviaTest. "Turkish Driving Licence Facts 2026 — MEB Test, Driving School Costs, Fines & Rules." Last modified March 24, 2026. https://autoviatest.com/en/driving-test/turkey/facts.

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Pawan Priyadarshi

Founder & Chief Engineer

Last updated: March 24, 2026

Reviewed by Pawan Priyadarshi

Data sourced from Karayolları Trafik Kanunu, EGM, MEB, TÜİK, European Commission, and official Turkish government sources. Cross-referenced with multiple authoritative sources for accuracy. Fine amounts subject to annual inflation adjustment.

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