License from ChinaDriving in Vermont

Can you drive in Vermont with a Chinese license?

Can you drive in Vermont with a Chinese license? See IDP and translation rules, plus the steps for visitors and new residents.

Yes, with conditionsas a visitor, for up to 60 days

  • Visitingup to 60 days on your current licence
  • Moving here60 days to switch to a local licence
  • IDPdepends on your stay, details below
✓ Verified against official sources

What we verified for this route

Human-reviewed on July 11, 2026. 5 official sources connected.

Visitor driving rule

Verified July 11, 2026 by Andrei Zakhareuski

Likely yes or conditional for visitors in Vermont, but this route needs reviewer confirmation against the official source.

Destination-level research notes for reviewer: Vermont's online statutes page says the statutes include actions of the 2025 session and are an unofficial copy of the Vermont Statutes Annotated provided as a convenience. Vermont defines a resident, for Title 23, as a person living in Vermont who intends to make Vermont the person's principal domicile permanently or for an indefinite number of years. It separately says students, seasonal migrant workers, and people employed under fixed-term contracts are not residents for this title when they live in Vermont for a defined period. Vermont defines a nonresident as any person who does not come under the definition of a resident. A Vermont resident may not operate a motor vehicle on a Vermont highway unless the resident holds a valid Vermont license, unless another law provides otherwise. A new resident who moved to Vermont from another jurisdiction and holds a valid motor-vehicle operating license must obtain a Vermont license within 60 days after moving to Vermont. A nonresident may operate in Vermont with a valid license or permit issued by another U.S. jurisdiction. A nonresident with a license or permit from a jurisdiction outside the United States may operate in Vermont only if the person is at least 18, is lawfully present in the United States, has been in the United States for not more than one year, and possesses an international driving permit. Vermont license applicants must surrender any valid license from another state or Canadian jurisdiction. The surrender text found in this pass does not include foreign-country licenses.

23 V.S.A. Section 4 Definitions23 V.S.A. Section 601 License required23 V.S.A. Section 603 Application for and issuance of license23 V.S.A. Section 617 Learner's permit23 V.S.A. Section 632 Examination required; waiver

International Driving Permit

Verified July 11, 2026 by Andrei Zakhareuski

IDP or international-permit handling is mentioned for Vermont; confirm whether it is required, recommended, or only a translation aid.

Destination-level research notes for reviewer: Vermont's online statutes page says the statutes include actions of the 2025 session and are an unofficial copy of the Vermont Statutes Annotated provided as a convenience. Vermont defines a resident, for Title 23, as a person living in Vermont who intends to make Vermont the person's principal domicile permanently or for an indefinite number of years. It separately says students, seasonal migrant workers, and people employed under fixed-term contracts are not residents for this title when they live in Vermont for a defined period. Vermont defines a nonresident as any person who does not come under the definition of a resident. A Vermont resident may not operate a motor vehicle on a Vermont highway unless the resident holds a valid Vermont license, unless another law provides otherwise. A new resident who moved to Vermont from another jurisdiction and holds a valid motor-vehicle operating license must obtain a Vermont license within 60 days after moving to Vermont. A nonresident may operate in Vermont with a valid license or permit issued by another U.S. jurisdiction. A nonresident with a license or permit from a jurisdiction outside the United States may operate in Vermont only if the person is at least 18, is lawfully present in the United States, has been in the United States for not more than one year, and possesses an international driving permit. Vermont license applicants must surrender any valid license from another state or Canadian jurisdiction. The surrender text found in this pass does not include foreign-country licenses.

23 V.S.A. Section 4 Definitions23 V.S.A. Section 601 License required23 V.S.A. Section 603 Application for and issuance of license23 V.S.A. Section 617 Learner's permit23 V.S.A. Section 632 Examination required; waiver

New resident deadline

Verified July 11, 2026 by Andrei Zakhareuski

New residents appear to have about 60 days before needing a local licence in Vermont; verify the exact wording.

Destination-level research notes for reviewer: Vermont's online statutes page says the statutes include actions of the 2025 session and are an unofficial copy of the Vermont Statutes Annotated provided as a convenience. Vermont defines a resident, for Title 23, as a person living in Vermont who intends to make Vermont the person's principal domicile permanently or for an indefinite number of years. It separately says students, seasonal migrant workers, and people employed under fixed-term contracts are not residents for this title when they live in Vermont for a defined period. Vermont defines a nonresident as any person who does not come under the definition of a resident. A Vermont resident may not operate a motor vehicle on a Vermont highway unless the resident holds a valid Vermont license, unless another law provides otherwise. A new resident who moved to Vermont from another jurisdiction and holds a valid motor-vehicle operating license must obtain a Vermont license within 60 days after moving to Vermont. A nonresident may operate in Vermont with a valid license or permit issued by another U.S. jurisdiction. A nonresident with a license or permit from a jurisdiction outside the United States may operate in Vermont only if the person is at least 18, is lawfully present in the United States, has been in the United States for not more than one year, and possesses an international driving permit. Vermont license applicants must surrender any valid license from another state or Canadian jurisdiction. The surrender text found in this pass does not include foreign-country licenses.

23 V.S.A. Section 4 Definitions23 V.S.A. Section 601 License required23 V.S.A. Section 603 Application for and issuance of license23 V.S.A. Section 617 Learner's permit23 V.S.A. Section 632 Examination required; waiver

License exchange

Verified July 11, 2026 by Andrei Zakhareuski

Exchange or transfer may be possible in Vermont, depending on issuing country and licence class. Verify this origin specifically.

Destination-level research notes for reviewer: Vermont's online statutes page says the statutes include actions of the 2025 session and are an unofficial copy of the Vermont Statutes Annotated provided as a convenience. Vermont defines a resident, for Title 23, as a person living in Vermont who intends to make Vermont the person's principal domicile permanently or for an indefinite number of years. It separately says students, seasonal migrant workers, and people employed under fixed-term contracts are not residents for this title when they live in Vermont for a defined period. Vermont defines a nonresident as any person who does not come under the definition of a resident. A Vermont resident may not operate a motor vehicle on a Vermont highway unless the resident holds a valid Vermont license, unless another law provides otherwise. A new resident who moved to Vermont from another jurisdiction and holds a valid motor-vehicle operating license must obtain a Vermont license within 60 days after moving to Vermont. A nonresident may operate in Vermont with a valid license or permit issued by another U.S. jurisdiction. A nonresident with a license or permit from a jurisdiction outside the United States may operate in Vermont only if the person is at least 18, is lawfully present in the United States, has been in the United States for not more than one year, and possesses an international driving permit. Vermont license applicants must surrender any valid license from another state or Canadian jurisdiction. The surrender text found in this pass does not include foreign-country licenses.

23 V.S.A. Section 4 Definitions23 V.S.A. Section 601 License required23 V.S.A. Section 603 Application for and issuance of license23 V.S.A. Section 617 Learner's permit23 V.S.A. Section 632 Examination required; waiver

Testing requirements

Verified July 11, 2026 by Andrei Zakhareuski

Testing depends on exchange eligibility in Vermont. Verify written/road/vision requirements for this origin.

Destination-level research notes for reviewer: Vermont's online statutes page says the statutes include actions of the 2025 session and are an unofficial copy of the Vermont Statutes Annotated provided as a convenience. Vermont defines a resident, for Title 23, as a person living in Vermont who intends to make Vermont the person's principal domicile permanently or for an indefinite number of years. It separately says students, seasonal migrant workers, and people employed under fixed-term contracts are not residents for this title when they live in Vermont for a defined period. Vermont defines a nonresident as any person who does not come under the definition of a resident. A Vermont resident may not operate a motor vehicle on a Vermont highway unless the resident holds a valid Vermont license, unless another law provides otherwise. A new resident who moved to Vermont from another jurisdiction and holds a valid motor-vehicle operating license must obtain a Vermont license within 60 days after moving to Vermont. A nonresident may operate in Vermont with a valid license or permit issued by another U.S. jurisdiction. A nonresident with a license or permit from a jurisdiction outside the United States may operate in Vermont only if the person is at least 18, is lawfully present in the United States, has been in the United States for not more than one year, and possesses an international driving permit. Vermont license applicants must surrender any valid license from another state or Canadian jurisdiction. The surrender text found in this pass does not include foreign-country licenses.

23 V.S.A. Section 4 Definitions23 V.S.A. Section 601 License required23 V.S.A. Section 603 Application for and issuance of license23 V.S.A. Section 617 Learner's permit23 V.S.A. Section 632 Examination required; waiver

Translation requirements

Verified July 11, 2026 by Andrei Zakhareuski

Translation handling is mentioned for Vermont. Verify whether this origin licence needs a certified translation or IDP.

Destination-level research notes for reviewer: Vermont's online statutes page says the statutes include actions of the 2025 session and are an unofficial copy of the Vermont Statutes Annotated provided as a convenience. Vermont defines a resident, for Title 23, as a person living in Vermont who intends to make Vermont the person's principal domicile permanently or for an indefinite number of years. It separately says students, seasonal migrant workers, and people employed under fixed-term contracts are not residents for this title when they live in Vermont for a defined period. Vermont defines a nonresident as any person who does not come under the definition of a resident. A Vermont resident may not operate a motor vehicle on a Vermont highway unless the resident holds a valid Vermont license, unless another law provides otherwise. A new resident who moved to Vermont from another jurisdiction and holds a valid motor-vehicle operating license must obtain a Vermont license within 60 days after moving to Vermont. A nonresident may operate in Vermont with a valid license or permit issued by another U.S. jurisdiction. A nonresident with a license or permit from a jurisdiction outside the United States may operate in Vermont only if the person is at least 18, is lawfully present in the United States, has been in the United States for not more than one year, and possesses an international driving permit. Vermont license applicants must surrender any valid license from another state or Canadian jurisdiction. The surrender text found in this pass does not include foreign-country licenses.

23 V.S.A. Section 4 Definitions23 V.S.A. Section 601 License required23 V.S.A. Section 603 Application for and issuance of license23 V.S.A. Section 617 Learner's permit23 V.S.A. Section 632 Examination required; waiver

Documents to bring

Verified July 11, 2026 by Andrei Zakhareuski

Documents are required for a local licence in Vermont; verify the exact list for this origin and status.

Destination-level research notes for reviewer: Vermont's online statutes page says the statutes include actions of the 2025 session and are an unofficial copy of the Vermont Statutes Annotated provided as a convenience. Vermont defines a resident, for Title 23, as a person living in Vermont who intends to make Vermont the person's principal domicile permanently or for an indefinite number of years. It separately says students, seasonal migrant workers, and people employed under fixed-term contracts are not residents for this title when they live in Vermont for a defined period. Vermont defines a nonresident as any person who does not come under the definition of a resident. A Vermont resident may not operate a motor vehicle on a Vermont highway unless the resident holds a valid Vermont license, unless another law provides otherwise. A new resident who moved to Vermont from another jurisdiction and holds a valid motor-vehicle operating license must obtain a Vermont license within 60 days after moving to Vermont. A nonresident may operate in Vermont with a valid license or permit issued by another U.S. jurisdiction. A nonresident with a license or permit from a jurisdiction outside the United States may operate in Vermont only if the person is at least 18, is lawfully present in the United States, has been in the United States for not more than one year, and possesses an international driving permit. Vermont license applicants must surrender any valid license from another state or Canadian jurisdiction. The surrender text found in this pass does not include foreign-country licenses.

23 V.S.A. Section 4 Definitions23 V.S.A. Section 601 License required23 V.S.A. Section 603 Application for and issuance of license23 V.S.A. Section 617 Learner's permit23 V.S.A. Section 632 Examination required; waiver

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Last reviewed
July 11, 2026

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