Driver’s license in Connecticut
Procedural guide on how to obtain or renew a driver’s license in Connecticut as an immigrant in the United States. Includes REAL ID information, minimum ages, typically accepted documents, and whether the state allows licenses for undocumented individuals.
Key facts
| Item | Information |
|---|---|
| Issuing agency | Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles |
| Minimum age (full license) | 18 years |
| License validity | Either 4 or 6 years, at the discretion of the driver |
| REAL ID certification | December 20, 2012 |
| Allows undocumented license | Yes |
REAL ID compliance
REAL ID is a federal identification standard that became mandatory for domestic US flights on May 7, 2025. Without a REAL ID compliant license/ID (or passport, etc.), you cannot board a domestic commercial flight in the US.
Connecticut was REAL ID certified: December 20, 2012
To obtain a REAL ID compliant license in Connecticut, you generally need:
- Proof of identity: current passport, certified birth certificate, or equivalent document
- Social Security Number (SSN) or SSA denial letter
- Two proofs of Connecticut residency (utility bills, lease, pay stubs)
- Proof of lawful immigration status (green card, valid visa, EAD)
Undocumented individuals cannot obtain a REAL ID compliant license. In states that allow undocumented licenses, that license has a visible mark (“Not for Federal Identification” or similar) and does NOT serve as REAL ID.
Driver’s license for undocumented residents
Connecticut DOES allow undocumented individuals to obtain a driver’s license or driving privilege card, under law H 6495.
This law provides driver’s licenses to applicants who submit a valid foreign passport or consular identification and proof of residency, regardless of legal presence in the United States. Applicants must file to legalize as soon as he or she is eligible
Typically required documents
Regardless of immigration status, most state DMVs require documents in these categories:
- Identity (one of): current passport, certified birth certificate, consular ID (matrícula consular in some states)
- Social Security Number (when applicable): SSN card, W-2 form, pay stub, or SSA denial letter
- Connecticut residency (two recent dated proofs): utility bill, lease agreement, bank statement, tax return
- Lawful immigration status (when applicable): green card, valid visa, I-94, EAD
How to find the Connecticut DMV
For hours, office locations, appointments, and current document requirements verification:
→ Search “Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles” on Google or visit the state’s official site.
Frequently asked questions
Can I drive in Connecticut with my foreign license?
In most states, yes — temporarily. Visitors can drive with their foreign license for limited periods (typically 30-90 days after establishing residency). Once a state resident, you must obtain a state license.
Do they accept matrícula consular as identification?
Depends on the state. Connecticut accepts matrícula consular under certain circumstances. Verify with the Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles before your appointment.
How much does the license cost?
Fees vary: typically $20-$80 for a regular license. REAL ID and CDL (commercial) licenses cost more. Verify current fees on the official DMV site.
How long does getting the license take?
If you pass all exams, you usually receive a provisional license the same day and the final plastic card arrives by mail in 2-4 weeks.
What happens if I drive without a license?
In Connecticut, driving without a valid license is a civil or criminal infraction depending on circumstances. Consequences can include: fine, vehicle impoundment, arrest, and for undocumented individuals, potential ICE contact.
Last verified: 2026-05-24. General information — not legal advice. DMV rules change; always verify with the Connecticut Department of Motor Vehicles before your visit.
Related procedural information
- Consulates of your country in the United States — passport renewal, consular ID, document apostille
- ITIN: tax filing without SSN — required for tax obligations regardless of immigration status
- ITIN-friendly US bank accounts — check accounts open without SSN
- State IDs by state — non-driving identification options
License and ID options available in Connecticut
| License or ID type | Available in Connecticut | Status required | Fee range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard driver’s license (Class C/D/E) | ✅ YES | Lawful immigration status required (unless undocumented license below applies) | $25-$80 (5-year typical) | Default for most adults. Renews every 4-8 years. Most common identification document for adults. |
| REAL ID compliant license | ✅ YES | Lawful status required + proof of identity, SSN, two proofs of residence | Same as standard or +$5-$30 | Required for domestic US flights as of May 7, 2025. Star symbol on top right. |
| Driver’s license for undocumented residents | ✅ YES | None — see notes | $25-$80 typical | Drive-Only license — marked ‘NOT FOR FEDERAL ID, VOTING, OR PUBLIC BENEFITS.’ Requires CT residency + foreign ID + Social Security ineligibility affidavit. |
| State ID (non-driving) | ✅ YES | Status not required in most states for ID-only | $10-$40 | For people who don’t drive. Same identity-verification requirements as license. |
| Enhanced Driver’s License (EDL) | ❌ NO | US citizen OR LPR | N/A | Only available in MI, MN, NY, VT, WA — use a US passport card or passport instead in Connecticut. |
| Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) | ✅ YES (Class A, B, C) | SSN REQUIRED by federal law (49 CFR 383.71) + lawful status | $100-$200 + endorsement fees | For driving commercial vehicles (semi-trucks, buses, hazmat). Subject to federal medical certification, drug/alcohol testing. ITIN does NOT qualify for CDL — must have SSN. |
| Motorcycle license (Class M) | ✅ YES | Same as regular license | $15-$50 | Usually an endorsement on regular license. Separate skill + knowledge test required. |
| Learner’s permit | ✅ YES | Typically 15-15.5 years old + parent consent | $15-$40 | First step toward full license. Requires supervised driving with licensed adult. |
| Provisional/junior license | ✅ YES | Typically 16-17 years old after permit period | $20-$60 | Limited hours, passenger restrictions. Auto-converts to full license at 18. |
| Disabled parking placard | ✅ YES | Medical certification (no immigration status required) | $0-$10 | Issued separately from license. Renewable every 2-4 years. |
Where Connecticut REAL ID status sits in 2025
REAL ID became mandatory for boarding domestic US commercial flights on May 7, 2025 (49 CFR 1560). Without a REAL ID-compliant license OR an alternative federal ID (US passport, passport card, military ID, etc.), you cannot board a domestic flight. International flights always required a passport.
To qualify for a REAL ID in Connecticut: prove identity (passport or certified birth certificate), Social Security Number, two proofs of Connecticut residency. Lawful immigration status is required. Undocumented residents cannot obtain REAL ID — but the standard license, undocumented license (in states that allow it), and Enhanced Driver’s License (in EDL states for citizens/LPRs) remain valid for driving.
Common reasons each license type matters for immigrants
- Standard or undocumented license → drive legally, satisfy I-9 employment verification (List B if accompanied by SSA letter for List C)
- REAL ID → board domestic US flights (post May 7, 2025)
- State ID (non-driving) → identity for opening bank accounts, signing leases, voting in some jurisdictions, registering children for school
- Enhanced DL (where available) → cross US-Canada or US-Mexico land border without passport
- CDL → drive commercial trucks/buses (must have SSN; not available to ITIN-only)
- Motorcycle license → separate skill demonstration; endorsement on regular license
Frequently asked questions
Can I drive in Connecticut with my foreign license?
Do they accept matrícula consular as identification?
How much does the license cost?
How long does getting the license take?
What happens if I drive without a license?
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General information, not legal advice. MigrantUSA is an independent publisher and is not a law firm; using this site does not create an attorney-client relationship, and this content is not a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney about your specific situation. US federal, state, and local government procedures, fees, and forms change. Always verify current details directly with the relevant agency before acting. For immigration, tax, or other legal matters specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney or BIA-accredited representative.