Law enforcement Highway Patrol vehicle cameras such as these can be used to take the images scanned by automatic number-plate recognition systems.
Australia Several State Police Forces, and the
Department of Justice (Victoria) use both fixed and mobile ANPR systems. The
New South Wales Police Force Highway Patrol were the first to trial and use a fixed ANPR camera system in Australia in 2005. In 2009 they began a roll-out of a mobile ANPR system (known officially as MANPR) with three infrared cameras fitted to its Highway Patrol fleet. The system identifies unregistered and stolen vehicles as well as disqualified or suspended drivers as well as other 'persons of interest' such as persons having outstanding warrants.
Belgium The city of
Mechelen uses an ANPR system since September 2011 to scan all cars crossing the city limits (inbound and outbound). Cars listed on '
black lists' (no insurance, stolen, etc.) generate an alarm in the dispatching room, so they can be intercepted by a patrol. As of early 2012, 1 million cars per week are automatically checked in this way.
Canada Federal, provincial, and municipal police services across Canada use automatic licence plate recognition software; they are also used on certain toll routes and by parking enforcement agencies. Laws governing usage of information thus obtained use of such devices are mandated through various provincial privacy acts.
Denmark The technique is tested by the Danish police. It has been in permanent use since mid 2016.
France 180 gantries over major roads have been built throughout the country. These together with a further 250 fixed cameras is to enable a levy of an eco tax on lorries over 3.5 tonnes. The system is currently being opposed and whilst they may be collecting data on vehicles passing the cameras, no eco tax is being charged.
Germany On 11 March 2008, the
Federal Constitutional Court of Germany ruled that some areas of the laws permitting the use of automated number plate recognition systems in Germany violated the right to
privacy. More specifically, the court found that the retention of any sort of information (i.e., number plate data) which was not for any pre-destined use (e.g., for use tracking suspected terrorists or for enforcement of speeding laws) was in violation of German law. These systems were provided by Jenoptik Robot GmbH, and called TraffiCapture.
Hungary at
Érd, Hungary In 2012 a state consortium was formed among the Hungarian Ministry of Interior, the National Police Headquarters and the Central Commission of Public Administration and Electronic Services with the aim to install and operate a unified
intelligent transportation system (
ITS) with nationwide coverage by the end of 2015. Within the system, 160 portable traffic enforcement and data-gathering units and 365 permanent gantry installations were brought online with ANPR, speed detection, imaging and statistical capabilities. Since all the data points are connected to a centrally located ITS, each member of the consortium is able to separately utilize its range of administrative and enforcement activities, such as remote vehicle registration and insurance verification, speed, lane and traffic light enforcement and wanted or stolen vehicle interception among others. Several Hungarian
auxiliary police units also use a system called Matrix Police in cooperation with the
police. It consists of a portable computer equipped with a web camera that scans the stolen car database using automatic number-plate recognition. The system is installed on the dashboard of selected patrol vehicles (
PDA-based hand-held versions also exist) and is mainly used to control the license plate of parking cars. As the Auxiliary Police do not have the authority to order moving vehicles to stop, if a stolen car is found, the formal police is informed.
Netherlands DXC Technology has implemented an advanced ANPR solution for the Netherlands, which is deployed for various national security and traffic management purposes. This comprehensive automatic number plate recognition system is part of a broader initiative to enhance enforcement, investigation, and monitoring capabilities for Dutch authorities. The system is designed to integrate seamlessly with existing infrastructure, providing real-time data processing and analytics to enhance operational efficiency and decision-making. The implementation includes collaboration with local government agencies to ensure compliance with national legal frameworks and supports a wide array of applications such as traffic regulation enforcement, security monitoring, and toll collection.
Norway metaBOF is deployed in Norway as a national ANPR/traffic‑sensor processing platform used operationally by Tolletaten (Norwegian Customs) and Statens vegvesen (the Norwegian Public Roads Administration) to support tolling, border control, vehicle compliance monitoring and related enforcement workflows; the system integrates ANPR and other sensors, vehicle‑of‑interest lists, traffic analytics and real‑time notifications and is hosted in government‑compliant data centres A challenge for plates recognition in Saudi Arabia is the size of the digits. Some plates use both Eastern Arabic numerals and the 'Western Arabic' equivalents. A research with source code is available for APNR Arabic digits.
Sweden The technique is tested by the
Swedish Police Authority at nine different locations in Sweden.
Turkey Several cities have tested—and some have put into service—the
KGYS (Kent Guvenlik Yonetim Sistemi, City Security Administration System), i.e., capital Ankara, has debuted KGYS- which consists of a registration plate number recognition system on the main arteries and city exits. The system has been used with two cameras per lane, one for plate recognition, one for speed detection. Now the system has been widened to network all the registration number cameras together, and enforcing average speed over preset distances. Some arteries have limit, and some , and photo evidence with date-time details are posted to registration address if speed violation is detected. As of 2012, the fine for exceeding the speed limit for more than 30% is about (US$).
Ukraine The project of system integration «OLLI Technology» and the
Ministry of Internal Affairs of Ukraine Department of State Traffic Inspection (STI) experiments on the introduction of a modern technical complex which is capable to locate stolen cars, drivers deprived of driving licenses and other problem cars in real time. The Ukrainian complex "Video control" working by a principle of video fixing of the car with recognition of license plates with check under data base.
United Kingdom belonging to
Greater Manchester Police The
Home Office states the purpose of automatic number-plate recognition in the
United Kingdom is to help detect, deter and disrupt criminality including tackling organised crime groups and terrorists. Vehicle movements are recorded through a network of nearly 13,000 cameras that capture approximately 55 million ANPR 'read' records daily. These records are stored for up to two years in the National ANPR Data Centre, which can be accessed, analysed and used as evidence as part of investigations by
UK law enforcement agencies. In 2012, the UK Parliament enacted the
Protection of Freedoms Act which includes several provisions related to controlling and restricting the collection, storage, retention, and use of information about individuals. Under this Act, the Home Office published a code of practice in 2013 for the use of surveillance cameras, including ANPR, by government and law enforcement agencies. The aim of the code is to help ensure their use is "characterised as surveillance by consent, and such consent on the part of the community must be informed consent and not assumed by a system operator. Surveillance by consent should be regarded as analogous to
policing by consent." In addition, a set of standards was introduced in 2014 for data, infrastructure, and data access and management.
United States police car equipped with mobile ALPR in New York In the United States, ANPR systems are more commonly referred to as ALPR (Automatic License Plate Reader/Recognition) technology, due to differences in language (i.e., "number plates" are referred to as "license plates" in
American English) Since 2019, private companies like
Flock Safety have grown rapidly, promoting stationary ALPR cameras to private individuals as well as neighbourhood associations and law enforcement. By April 2022, 1500 cities across the United States had implemented Flock cameras, despite criticism from the ACLU and other civil rights organisations and concerns about whether the system actually reduces crime. In 2025, ALPR cameras are being used by ICE and ERO to search for "immigration" related activities, potentially aiding in deportation detainment. Currently, there is no need for a warrant nor restriction on how law enforcement can use ALPR data. Mobile ANPR use is widespread among US law enforcement agencies at the city, county, state and federal level. According to a 2012 report by the Police Executive Research Forum, approximately 71% of all US police departments use some form of ANPR. Mobile ANPR is becoming a significant component of municipal predictive policing strategies and intelligence gathering, as well as for recovery of stolen vehicles, identification of wanted felons, and revenue collection from individuals who are delinquent on city or state taxes or fines, or monitoring for
Amber Alerts. With the widespread implementation of this technology, many U.S. states now issue misdemeanor citations of up to $500 when a license plate is identified as expired or on the incorrect vehicle. Successfully recognized plates may be matched against databases including "wanted person", "protection order", missing person, gang member, known and suspected terrorist, supervised release, immigration violator, and National Sex Offender lists. In addition to the real-time processing of license plate numbers, ANPR systems in the US collect (and can indefinitely store) data from each license plate capture. Images, dates, times and GPS coordinates can be stockpiled and can help place a suspect at a scene, aid in witness identification, pattern recognition or the tracking of individuals. In 2014, The
Department of Homeland Security proposed a federal database to combine all monitoring systems, which was cancelled after privacy complaints. In 1998, a Washington, D.C. police lieutenant pleaded guilty to extortion after blackmailing the owners of vehicles parked near a gay bar. In 2015, the
Los Angeles Police Department proposed sending letters to the home addresses of all vehicles that enter areas of high prostitution. Early private sector mobile ANPR applications have been for vehicle repossession and recovery, although the application of ANPR by private companies to collect information from privately owned vehicles or collected from private property (for example, driveways) has become an issue of sensitivity and public debate. Other ANPR uses include parking enforcement, and revenue collection from individuals who are delinquent on city or state taxes or fines. The technology is often featured in the reality TV show
Parking Wars featured on
A&E Network. In the show, tow truck drivers and booting teams use the ANPR to find delinquent vehicles with high amounts of unpaid parking fines.
Laws Laws vary among the states regarding collection and retention of license plate information. , 16 states have limits on how long the data may be retained, with the lowest being New Hampshire (3 minutes) and highest Colorado (3 years). The
Supreme Court of Virginia ruled in 2018 that data collected from ALPRs can constitute personal information. As a result, on 1 April 2019, a
Fairfax County judge issued an
injunction prohibiting the
Fairfax County Police Department from collecting and storing ALPR data outside of an investigation or intelligence gathering related to a criminal investigation. On October 22, 2020, the Supreme Court of Virginia overturned that decision, ruling that the data collected was not personal, identifying information. In April 2020, the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court found that the warrantless use of automated license plate readers to surveil a suspected heroin distributor's bridge crossings to
Cape Cod did not violate the
Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution only because of the limited time and scope of the observations. Belgium, Dubai (UAE), France, Ireland, Italy, The Netherlands, Spain, South Africa, the UK, and Kuwait. This works by tracking vehicles' travel time between two fixed points, and calculating the average speed. These cameras are claimed to have an advantage over traditional speed cameras in maintaining steady legal speeds over extended distances, rather than encouraging heavy braking on approach to specific camera locations and subsequent acceleration back to illegal speeds.
Italy In
Italian highways there is a monitoring system named covering more than (2012). The Tutor system is also able to intercept cars while changing lanes. The Tutor or Safety Tutor is a joint project between the motorway management company,
Autostrade per l'Italia, and the State Police. Over time it has been replaced by other versions for example the SICVe-PM where PM stands for PlateMatching and by the SICVe Vergilius. In addition to this average speed monitoring system, there are others Celeritas and T-Expeed v.2.
Netherlands Average speed cameras () are in place in the Netherlands since 2002. As of July 2009, 12 cameras were operational, mostly in the west of the country and along the
A12. The first permanent average speed cameras were installed on the A13 in 2002, shortly after the speed limit was reduced to to limit noise and air pollution in the area. In 2007, average speed cameras resulted in 1.7 million fines for overspeeding out of a total of 9.7 million. According to the Dutch Attorney General, the average number of violation of the speed limits on motorway sections equipped with average speed cameras is between 1 and 2%, compared to 10 to 15% elsewhere.
United Kingdom One of the most notable stretches of average speed cameras in the UK is found on the
A77 road in Scotland, with being monitored between
Kilmarnock and
Girvan. In 2006 it was confirmed that speeding tickets could potentially be avoided from the '
SPECS' cameras by changing lanes and the
RAC Foundation feared that people may play "Russian Roulette" changing from one lane to another to lessen their odds of being caught; however, in 2007 the system was upgraded for multi-lane use and in 2008 the manufacturer described the "myth" as "categorically untrue". There exists evidence that implementation of systems such as SPECS has a considerable effect on the volume of drivers travelling at excessive speeds; on the stretch of road mentioned above (A77 Between Glasgow and Ayr) there has been noted a "huge drop" in speeding violations since the introduction of a SPECS system. Large networks of ANPR systems are being installed by cities such as Boston, London and New York City to provide citywide protection against acts of terrorism, and to provide support for public gatherings and public spaces. The Center For Evidence-Based Crime Policy in George Mason University identifies the following randomized controlled trials of automatic number-plate recognition technology as very rigorous.
Enterprise security and services In addition to government facilities, many private sector industries with facility security concerns are beginning to implement ANPR solutions. Examples include casinos, hospitals, museums, parking facilities, and resorts. In the US, private facilities typically cannot access government or police watch lists, but may develop and match against their own databases for customers, VIPs, critical personnel or "banned person" lists. In addition to providing perimeter security, private ANPR has service applications for valet / recognized customer and VIP recognition, logistics and key personnel tracking, sales and advertising, parking management, and logistics (vendor and support
vehicle tracking).
Traffic control at
Schönberg, Austria Many cities and districts have developed traffic control systems to help monitor the movement and flow of vehicles around the road network. This had typically involved looking at historical data, estimates, observations and statistics, such as: • Car park usage •
Pedestrian crossing usage • Number of vehicles along a road • Areas of low and high congestion • Frequency, location and cause of road works CCTV cameras can be used to help traffic control centres by giving them live data, allowing for traffic management decisions to be made in real-time. By using ANPR on this footage it is possible to monitor the travel of individual vehicles, automatically providing information about the speed and flow of various routes. These details can highlight problem areas as and when they occur and help the centre to make informed incident management decisions. Some counties of the United Kingdom have worked with
Siemens Traffic to develop traffic monitoring systems for their own control centres and for the public. Projects such as
Hampshire County Council's ROMANSE provide an interactive and real-time website showing details about traffic in the city. The site shows information about car parks, ongoing road works, special events and footage taken from CCTV cameras. ANPR systems can be used to provide average point-to-point journey times along particular routes, which can be displayed on a
variable-message sign (VMS) giving drivers the ability to plan their route. ROMANSE also allows travellers to see the current situation using a mobile device with an Internet connection (such as
WAP,
GPRS or
3G), allowing them to view mobile device CCTV images within the Hampshire road network. The UK company Trafficmaster has used ANPR since 1998 to estimate average traffic speeds on non-motorway roads without the results being skewed by local fluctuations caused by traffic lights and similar. The company now operates a network of over 4000 ANPR cameras, but claims that only the four most central digits are identified, and no numberplate data is retained.
Electronic toll collection Toll roads system in
Orange County, California, uses ANPR and radio
transponders. in Norway
Ontario's
407 ETR highway uses a combination of ANPR and radio
transponders to toll vehicles entering and exiting the road. Radio antennas are located at each junction and detect the transponders, logging the unique identity of each vehicle in much the same way as the ANPR system does. Without ANPR as a second system it would not be possible to monitor all the traffic. Drivers who opt to rent a transponder for (US$) per month are not charged the "Video Toll Charge" of (US$) for using the road, with heavy vehicles (those with a gross weight of over ) being required to use one. Using either system, users of the highway are notified of the usage charges by post. There are numerous other
electronic toll collection networks which use this combination of
Radio frequency identification and ANPR. These include: • The
Golden Gate Bridge in
San Francisco, California, which began using an all-electronic tolling system combining
Fastrak and ANPR on March 27, 2013 •
NC Quick Pass for the
Interstate 540 (North Carolina) Triangle Expressway in
Wake County, North Carolina • Bridge Pass for the
Saint John Harbour Bridge in
Saint John, New Brunswick • Quickpass at the
Golden Ears Bridge, crossing the
Fraser River between
Langley and
Maple Ridge •
e-TAG, all Australian toll roads •
FasTrak in California, United States •
Highway 6 in Israel •
Tunnels in Hong Kong • Autopista Central in
Santiago, Chile •
E-ZPass in New York,
New Jersey,
Pennsylvania,
Massachusetts (as Fast Lane until 2012),
Virginia (formerly
Smart Tag), and other states.
Maryland Route 200 uses a combination of E-ZPass and ANPR. •
TollTag in North Texas and EZ-Tag in Houston, Texas •
I-Pass in
Illinois •
Pikepass in
Oklahoma • Peach Pass I-85 Atlanta, Georgia (
Gwinnett County). • OGS (Otomatik Geçiş Sistemi) used at
Bosphorus Bridge,
Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, and
Trans-European Motorway entry points in
Istanbul, Turkey •
M50 Westlink Toll in
Dublin, Ireland •
Hi-pass in South Korea •
Northern Gateway, SH 1,
Auckland, New Zealand •
Evergreen Point Floating Bridge,
Seattle, and
Washington State Route 167 HOT-lanes in western
Washington • ETC in
Taiwan •
SunPass In Florida
Norway DXC Technology supported the deployment of metaBOFtm Fines for traveling within the zone without paying the charge are £65 per infraction if paid before the deadline, doubling to £130 per infraction thereafter. There are currently 1,500 cameras which use automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) technology. There are also a number of mobile camera units which may be deployed anywhere in the zone. It is estimated that around 98% of vehicles moving within the zone are caught on camera. The video streams are transmitted to a data centre located in central London where the ANPR software deduces the registration plate of the vehicle. A second data centre provides a backup location for image data. Both front and back number plates are being captured, on vehicles going both in and out – this gives up to four chances to capture the number plates of a vehicle entering and exiting the zone. This list is then compared with a list of cars whose owners/operators have paid to enter the zone – those that have not paid are fined. The registered owner of such a vehicle is looked up in a database provided by the DVLA.
South Africa In Johannesburg, South Africa, ANPR is used for the etoll fee collection. Owners of cars driving into or out of the inner city must pay a charge. The number of tolls passed depends on the distance travelled on the particular freeway. Some of the freeways with ANPR are the N12, N3, N1 etc.
Sweden In
Stockholm, Sweden, ANPR is used for the
Stockholm congestion tax, owners of cars driving into or out of the inner city must pay a charge, depending on the time of the day. From 2013, also for the
Gothenburg congestion tax, which also includes vehicles passing the city on the main highways.
Private use Several UK companies and agencies use ANPR systems. These include Vehicle and Operator Services Agency (VOSA), Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) and Transport for London.
Other uses ANPR systems may also be used for/by: • Section control, to measure average vehicle speed over longer distances • Border crossings • Automobile repossessions •
Petrol stations to log when a motorist drives away without paying for their fuel • A marketing tool to log patterns of use • Targeted advertising, a-la
"Minority Report"-style billboards • Traffic management systems, which determine traffic flow using the time it takes vehicles to pass two ANPR sites • Analyses of travel behaviour (route choice, origin-destination etc.) for transport planning purposes • Drive-through customer recognition, to automatically recognize customers based on their license plate and offer them the items they ordered the last time they used the service • To assist
visitor management systems in recognizing guest vehicles • Police and auxiliary police • Car parking companies • To raise or lower
automatic bollards • Hotels • Enforcing
Move over laws for
emergency vehicles • Automated
emissions testing == Challenges ==