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An offpeak white on red number plate. Vehicles registered as "Off-peak Vehicles", colloquially known as "weekend cars" or red plate, pay a cheaper annual road tax compared to ordinary private cars, and rebates towards the registration of Certificate of Entitlement (COE) and Additional Registration Fee (ARF) on a new vehicle purchase. [24]
Autopass Card is a stored-value smart card that allows paying VEP fees, toll charges and ERP fees in Singapore. The card is sold only to foreign motorists. The card is sold only to foreign motorists. As vehicle information is encoded in the card, it is not transferable between vehicles.
The system uses open road tolling; vehicles do not stop or slow down to pay tolls. [4] [5] Singapore was the first city in the world to implement an electronic road toll collection system for purposes of congestion pricing. [6]
Licence plate. Vehicle licence plates in Singapore are the same 520 mm × 110 mm size found in many European countries. Red licence plates indicate that the car may be driven only during off-peak times unless a daily fee is paid. Off-peak times are from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. on weekdays and all day on Saturdays and Sundays. [15]
These gantries were monitored by auxiliary police officers who carried out visual checks and recorded any violations. Fines started at S$50. [ 6 ] Users had to buy, in advance, a special paper licence at a cost of S$3 per day, which was sold at post offices, petrol stations, area licence sales booths or convenience stores, on a monthly or daily ...
The Certificate of Entitlement (COE) are classes of categories as part of a quota license for owning a vehicle in Singapore. [1] The licence is obtained from a successful winning bid in an open bid uniform price auction which grants the legal right of the holder to register, own and use a vehicle in Singapore for an initial period of 10 years.
A neighbourhood police centre (Abbreviation: NPC; Malay: Pusat Polis Kejiranan [1]) is a small to mid-sized police station commonly found in Singapore. It was first introduced during the mid-1990s. It was first introduced during the mid-1990s.
CEPAS, the Specification for Contactless e-Purse Application, is a Singaporean specification for an electronic money smart card.The specification was prepared by the Cards and Personnel Identification Technical Committee (CPITC), under the purview of the IT Standard Committee of Singapore (ITSCS).