Written answers
Tuesday, 11 May 2021
Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport
Driver Licences
Jackie Cahill (Tipperary, Fianna Fail)
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211. To ask the Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport if a person (details supplied) can extend their international driving permit in order that they can drive with their non-EU/EEA driver licence while they are at home on ill-health grounds; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [24581/21]
Hildegarde Naughton (Galway West, Fine Gael)
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An international driving permit (IDP) is a translation of your driving licence and you must carry your driving licence with it when driving. When visiting in Ireland, a permit is only required if your driving licence is not in English. The permit itself does not grant any driving privileges.
There is a distinction between motorists with a foreign driving licence visiting Ireland and those living in Ireland. For non-residents, currently under the Convention on Road Traffic 1949 (Geneva Convention), drivers from Contracting States carrying a valid driver’s licence can drive on each other’s roads for up to a year when visiting.
If you are resident in Ireland, you must have an Irish/EU driving licence to drive here.
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