Hawaii offers tailored driver’s license renewal rules for seniors to balance safety and convenience. In 2026, these provisions—updated via the 2022 Kupuna License Extension (Act 159)—extend renewal periods for most seniors while requiring vision screenings.
Renewal Periods by Age
Drivers aged 72-79 can renew every four years instead of two, provided no impairing medical conditions are evident; a doctor’s medical certificate may be needed if issues arise during renewal.
Those 80 and older renew every two years, with mandatory vision tests by all counties regardless of age. Younger adults (25-72) get eight-year licenses, while under-25 renew every four years.
Renewals occur in person at satellite city halls or DMV offices up to six months early, with a 90-day grace period post-expiration ($5/month reactivation fee after).
Required Steps
- Bring driver’s license, proof of identity/legal presence, and Social Security number.
- Pass a vision screening (mandatory for seniors).
- Pay fees: ~$5 for four-year senior license, $9 for eight-year (plus $1 Driver Improvement fee); seniors 65+ may qualify for reductions.
No knowledge or road tests are typically required unless the license lapsed over a year.
| Age Group | Renewal Interval | Vision Test | Medical Review |
|---|---|---|---|
| 72-79 | 4 years | Yes | If conditions noted |
| 80+ | 2 years | Yes | Routine |
| Under 72 | 4-8 years | Yes (renewal) | N/A |
County Variations and Tips
Procedures align statewide but vary slightly: Honolulu emphasizes appointments via alohaq.org; Hawaii, Kauai, and Maui counties list specifics online. No 2026 changes noted—verify with your county DMV.
Seniors should prepare documents early and consider voluntary reporting of health changes to maintain safe driving privileges.
SOURCES :
- https://www.hawaiipublicradio.org/local-news/2022-12-29/new-law-extends-license-renewal-period-for-seniors-beginning-in-2023
- https://www.nolo.com/legal-encyclopedia/hawaii-driving-laws-seniors-older-drivers.html