Fordham Toyota

How to Get a New TLC Plate in NYC in 2026 (the WAV Rule, Explained)

A white Toyota Sienna with the rear ramp deployed at a Bronx curb

Short answer: In 2026, the realistic way to get a brand-new NYC for-hire (TLC) plate is with a wheelchair-accessible vehicle (WAV). The city has capped standard for-hire licenses, and the WAV path is the exception that is still open. In the most recent review period, about 97% of the new plates issued went to wheelchair-accessible vehicles.

If you are trying to start driving for Uber, Lyft or a livery base in New York City and you need a plate, this guide explains why, and exactly how the process works.

The number that matters
~97%

of the new NYC TLC plates issued in the latest review period went to wheelchair-accessible vehicles. That is the open door.

Why new TLC plates are hard to get right now

New York City paused new for-hire vehicle (FHV) licenses to control the number of cars on the road. The other ways in have effectively closed: the electric-vehicle exception filled up, and the lease-to-own exception only applies to older agreements. What remains open is the wheelchair-accessible vehicle exception, which lets a qualifying WAV owner apply for a brand-new plate.

New NYC TLC plates issued (latest review period)

WAV~97%
Other~3%

Source: NYC TLC plate report. A qualifying WAV is the realistic path to a new plate.

That is why a WAV is not just an accessibility product. For a new driver, it is the door into the business.

What counts as a qualifying WAV

A qualifying vehicle is converted by an approved upfitter (for example, BraunAbility or VMI) with a ramp, securement points and an accessible layout, and it must appear on the TLC approved vehicle list. Before you buy, confirm the exact converted model is on that list so it can be registered for accessible service.

Step by step: from vehicle to plate

StepWhat you do
1. Buy a TLC-approved WAVFor example, a wheelchair-accessible Toyota Sienna on the TLC approved list.
2. Affiliate with a baseUber, Lyft, black-car or a local livery base files a base affirmation.
3. Get FH-1 insuranceCommercial for-hire coverage. A personal auto policy is not accepted.
4. Submit the applicationFile the vehicle-license application in the TLC system and upload documents.
5. Get your platesThe TLC issues a DMV plate letter, you get TC plates at the DMV, then submit the plate notification.
6. Pass TLC inspectionWorking ramp, securement, decals and a valid safety inspection.

You also need a TLC driver license and to complete the required wheelchair-accessible vehicle training. Once you pass inspection, the license is typically activated within a couple of days.

A TLC driver standing next to his Toyota Sienna in New York City
A new plate is the start of the business. The van does the earning.

What it costs and how long it takes

Budget for the vehicle-license and inspection fees, FH-1 insurance, and the driver-side requirements (license, training). Timelines vary, but many drivers are on the road within a few weeks once the vehicle is ready and financing is in place. Fees change, so confirm the current amounts with the TLC before you commit. Financing options exist for many credit situations, and ITIN applications are accepted (on approved credit). See our guide to TLC car financing with an ITIN or no credit.

Why drivers choose the Toyota Sienna

The wheelchair-accessible Sienna keeps the hybrid drivetrain, so you get strong fuel economy and Toyota reliability while you serve accessible trips, which Uber and Lyft actively dispatch in NYC. A WAV also counts toward the city’s Green Rides mandate the same as an electric car, with no EV or charger to buy. It is the practical, business-first pick for a driver getting a new plate. For the full picture, read what makes a vehicle TLC WAV-approved.

Get started: See TLC-approved Sienna WAVs at Fordham Toyota in the Bronx and check if you qualify for a new plate.


This guide is informational and reflects rules as of July 2026. TLC rules, fees and program details change; confirm current requirements with the NYC TLC, and consult a tax advisor about any tax credits. Vehicle eligibility for accessible service depends on the specific converted model appearing on the TLC approved list. Financing on approved credit.

See TLC-approved Sienna WAVs in the Bronx