California EV Owners Now Risk A $490 Fine Under New Driving Rules
- California ends solo EV access to carpool lanes after 25 years.
- Drivers risk getting a ticket starting Dec 1 for using HOV lanes.
- Enforcement started after a 60-day grace period for local drivers.
California has long been America’s champion of electric mobility, a place where environmental ideals and car culture somehow coexist on the same sun-baked freeway. For years, the state has rolled out incentives to get drivers into EVs, from tax credits to special lane privileges.
Chief among them was the right to glide past gridlock in carpool lanes, solo and smugly efficient. But that era has now come to a halt.
Read: California Won’t Replace $7,500 EV Tax Credit as Newsom Accuses GM of Selling Out
For more than 25 years, states have been free to decide whether EV drivers could use carpool lanes, spaces meant for vehicles carrying at least one passenger. California made its stance clear early on.
It offered qualifying motorists distinctive Clean Air Vehicle stickers, granting them unrestricted access to these faster lanes even when driving alone.
From Exemption to Enforcement
That all changed when the Trump administration declined to renew the federal authorization that supported the state’s exemption. The cutoff date was October 1, and once that law expired, so did the automatic right for solo EVs to cruise in carpool lanes.
The California Highway Patrol then gave motorists a 60-day grace period to adjust their driving habits and exit the carpool lanes. Starting from December 1, police can now issue a $490 fine.
That’s not great news for local EV owners. Some suspect that by pulling EV drivers out of carpool lanes, which often sit empty during peak morning and afternoon hours, traffic on some of California’s highways may get even worse.
“It’s a huge, huge bummer for EV enthusiasts,” the president of the Tesla Owners of Silicon Valley club, John Stringer told The Press Democrat. “It has been one of the things we’ve been able to enjoy for years. It was one of the reasons why I bought my first EV.”
Stringer estimates that his carpool access saved him about 20 minutes each way on his daily commute, time that now returns to the general traffic pool.
In September, Rep. Mark DeSaulnier revealed that he had been lobbying in Washington, D.C., on behalf of EV drivers, trying to extend the carpool privilege for another six years through a House Resolution. Despite the effort, the proposal stalled before reaching a vote.