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HB 1732

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2025 Regular Session Introduced by Anthony Moore and 1 co-sponsor

Missouri restricts license plate covers and frames to keep plates plainly visible to the naked eye and to imaging systems, unless a transparent, non-tinted cover does not impair re

Approved by Governor 05/06/2025
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Bill Summary · HB 1732

Summary — HB 1732: Restrictions on License Plate Covers (Missouri)

Status: Enacted (Act 878) — Signed by the Governor 6/20/2025; Effective 9/1/2025
Introduced: 1/03/2025 (House); Introduced in Missouri by Rep. Wellenkamp

Purpose

To clarify and limit the use of license plate covers and frames so that license plates remain plainly visible to the naked eye and to law-enforcement imaging systems, and so that reflective qualities required for visibility are not impaired.

Key provisions

  • Repeals and replaces Mo. Rev. Stat. § 301.130 and restates plate issuance, display, and visibility requirements.
  • Allows license plates to be encased in a transparent, non‑tinted cover only if:
    • The plate is plainly visible to the naked eye; and
    • The plate remains visible to law‑enforcement image‑capture technology; and
    • The cover does not impair the plate’s reflective qualities.
  • Prohibits license plate frames that cover or obscure any information necessary for law‑enforcement purposes.
  • Retains existing statutory rules on mounting, positioning, and display of plates (e.g., fastening securely, keeping plates reasonably clean, front/rear placement and height ranges).
  • When enacted, the amended language replaces ambiguous wording to explicitly tie visibility and reflectivity requirements to both human observers and image‑capture systems.

Who is affected

  • Vehicle owners and operators in Missouri — use of tinted, obscuring, or otherwise impairing covers or frames will be restricted.
  • Retailers and manufacturers of plate covers and frames — product designs must comply with the new transparency and non‑tint requirement and not impair reflectivity.
  • Law enforcement agencies — enforcement is facilitated by clearer statutory standards linking visibility to both human sight and imaging technology.
  • Department of Revenue / license bureaus — continue to issue plates/tabs and may provide guidance on permissible covers/frames.

Enforcement and impact

  • The bill does not create new criminal classifications in the text provided; rather it clarifies permissible plate coverings and preserves existing obligations to display plates so they are visible and reflective. Noncompliance would be addressed under existing vehicle registration/plate display laws and enforcement practices.
  • Expected practical effects: fewer tinted or obscuring covers on Missouri vehicles; clearer basis for traffic stops or citations where covers impair plate readability or reflectivity.

Effective date and legislative action

  • Passed both chambers, enrolled, transmitted to Governor, signed 6/20/2025.
  • Effective date: September 1, 2025.
  • Enacted as Act 878.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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