Question to the Department for Transport:
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what recent assessment she has made of trends in the number of cloned registration mark reports received by the DVLA since 2020.
There are established data sharing arrangements in place which allow the police and local authorities to lawfully obtain up to date information about vehicles and their registered keepers. The police can also access details held on the Register of Number Plate Suppliers upon request.
The table below shows the number of occasions where members of the public have contacted the DVLA about correspondence, fines or penalties that they have received from third parties about the use of vehicles which they do not recognise or accept responsibility for. The table also includes the number of replacement vehicle registration numbers the DVLA has issued following receipt of these notifications. Replacement registration numbers are provided free of charge but the purchase of new number plates is the responsibility of the registered keeper. It is important to note that potential cloning is just one of the possible reasons why someone might receive such correspondence. A proportion of these cases will have been made as a result of errors, for example where a vehicle registration number has been entered incorrectly. Information about how many of these cases resulted in penalties, fines or enforcement action being withdrawn from affected motorists is not held.
Calendar Year | Number of reports | Number of replacement VRNs |
2020 | 7,377 | 112 |
2021 | 7,430 | 61 |
2022 | 7,837 | 101 |
2023 | 9,848 | 87 |
2024 | 10,461 | 136 |
2025 (to 31/10) | 9,385 | 137 |
Information on the total costs to motorists as a result of vehicle cloning incidents is not available.