Vehicle registration certificate


A vehicle registration certificate is an official
document providing proof of registration of a vehicle. It is used primarily by governments as a means of ensuring that all road vehicles are on the national vehicle register, but is also used as a form of law enforcement and to facilitate change of ownership when buying and selling a vehicle.

European Union and European Economic Area

In the European Economic Area, vehicle registration certificates are governed by the European directive 1999/37/EC. The information contained in these registration certificates includes:
In the UK the document was previously referred to as the "log book", and this is still common usage. The document is issued by the DVLA and tracks the registered keeper of the vehicle, rather than the owner. When a vehicle is transferred, exported, scrapped or had major modification the form is returned to the DVLA, who issue a new document, if appropriate, with the amended details.

2001 redesign

A new design was issued in 2001 to comply with EC directive 2001/127/EC, not as a result of a theft of blank forms in the same year.

Red forms

In 2011/2012 a programme was launched to replace the previous blue forms were with new red forms as a result of "theft of a number of blank V5Cs". The theft may have been of several hundred thousand forms in 2007/8, or the loss of over two million forms reported in 2008. Both or either incidents may relate to blank forms returned to a supplier in 2006 for overprinting which were eventually sent to be destroyed.
The police launched "Operation Drift" to recover stolen forms, over a thousand being recovered. The relevant serial numbers of the illegal VC5s are either :
Or, according to the DVLA reported in Parker's: