Massachusetts Is Banning Cars From Japan Without Telling Enthusiasts Why

Mass Bans Ts
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For more than three years, Americans living on the East Coast have been finding their states increasingly cold to the idea of registering tiny cars imported from Japan. Maine, Rhode Island, New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Georgia all have some problem with otherwise legal vintage cars from Japan, and now you can add Massachusetts to that list. The state has secretly rolled out a new policy that bans Kei vehicles, but accidentally has the effect of banning all over 25-year-old vehicles from Japan, but not from any other country. That’s bad enough, but the state isn’t really telling enthusiasts why.

I feel like I’m beginning to sound like a broken record here. It was just last week when I reported that Michigan has launched its own Kei vehicle ban. Almost immediately after that story, David McChristian, the founder of Lone Star Kei and the advocate we worked with on the story of the big win in Texas, reached out to me with news that trouble was brewing in Massachusetts.

However, unlike these previous states, Massachusetts decided to roll out a new policy before creating any public-facing documents on the matter. As a result, Kei vehicle enthusiasts are experiencing headaches at the Registry of Motor Vehicles (the DMV to almost everyone else) and they do not know why. I reached out to the state and after hearing the most depressing hold music for too many hours, I finally have an answer.

Massachusetts Begins Banning Cars

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Mercedes Streeter

I was tipped off to a potential new RMV policy in Massachusetts when readers and advocates began sending me reports that owners of cars imported from Japan are getting turned away from registration.

Reports have been piling into the newly-created ‘Massachusetts JDM Imports Advocates‘ Facebook group as well as the ‘New England Mini Kei Truck / Van JDM Group CT NY MA RI VT NH ME NJ scene’ group. There’s been a lot of confusion thanks to the way that Massachusetts has decided to enact its new policy. As of right now, the owner of an imported Japanese market vehicle can go to an RMV office and if they walk out with a registration seems to hinge heavily on if the office is aware of the new policy. If the office is aware of the new policy, the vehicle owner is told that their vehicle cannot be registered.

As of now, the Massachusetts RMV offices have not been clear as to why this is happening. Some have been told it’s because the state no longer registers imports with short VINs and some were told that the state no longer registers vehicles that do not meet American safety standards. Raymond Moy received this paper:

Rmv Letter
Raymond Moy

The problem with this document is that it doesn’t really reference any state law. Why is a short VIN suddenly a problem? It should be noted that Massachusetts enthusiasts have been able to register legally imported vehicles prior to this, so it’s not like a short Vehicle Identification Number was a problem in the past.

Unfortunately, the lack of communication from the state has led to a lot of speculation. If Massachusetts has banned short VINs, what does this mean for classic cars? 17-digit VINs didn’t become standard in America until 1981. If you are generous and assume the state is just targeting imports with short VINs, it still means an effective total ban on cars imported from Japan since Japanese market vehicles, even newer ones, don’t have the VIN format the state would be looking for.

One enthusiast got pretty close to the core of the issue, but even Massachusetts gave him a cold shoulder:

I’m not satisfied with guesswork, so I decided to find out what’s going on for myself.

Massachusetts Accidentally Bans All JDM Cars

I started off my search by combing through the Mass RMV website system. As of publishing, here’s what the website says about “Imported Foreign Vehicles:”

Rmvstuff

I’ve been digging these pages for a while and did not find a single mention of denying registration to an imported vehicle that complies with the infamous “25-year rule.”

For those of you not following this journey, America bans the importation of a vehicle unless it is either converted to EPA and Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards or is at least 25 years old. The EPA rule is a 21-year ban, but it is still effectively a 25-year ban since you’re usually trying to import a whole car. Anyway, once a car is at least 25 years old, the federal government no longer cares how safe the vehicle is.

However, there are two prongs to legalizing an imported vehicle, and pleasing the feds is just one of them. Your second hurdle is the state. The states reserve the right to dictate what vehicles can and cannot drive on their roads and as we’ve been seeing for more than three years, some states do not care if your vehicle got through Customs without a problem.

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Mercedes Streeter

I’ve spent several hours looking into this and have finally reached a breakthrough this morning. First, I have to say that Massachusetts has the most depressing hold music I’ve listened to in years. It’s as if the RMV knows you’re in for a bad time.

Anyway, I first contacted the state’s RMV helpline, where I spoke with a call center representative before being punted to a supervisor. That supervisor then sent me to the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, who sent me to Jacquelyn Goddard, the MassDOT Director of Communications. That ended up being a dead end as Goddard didn’t answer the phone and the line did not allow me to leave a message. So, I sent them an email. I also contacted Colleen Ogilvie, The Registrar of Motor Vehicles.

Sadly, I found myself spinning my wheels without any more information than the enthusiasts had. But, I don’t like to give up that easily and I called up the RMV Titling Department. The person at the call center had no idea what I was talking about but sent me up to the supervisor team, where I spoke with Natasha.

Thankfully, Natasha knows all about what’s happening right now and she will be in a meeting later today where the details of the ban will be finalized. She was able to give me the specifics of the current policy but warned that details may change after today’s meeting. Once the state irons out what it wants to do with imported vehicles, it will update its website, train its offices, and send out documentation.

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Mitsubishi Minicab – Mitsui Co

So, here’s what’s currently happening with imported vehicles. Natasha tells me that as of right now, the RMV is under orders from its legal department to deny the registration of vehicles believed to be in Japan’s tiny Kei class. The list of vehicles is currently:

Honda Acty (truck and van)
Suzuki Carry/Every
Mitsubishi Minicab (truck and van)
Autozam/Mazda Scrum (truck and van)
Subaru Sambar (truck and van)
Isuzu Mini Truck
Nissan Clipper
Toyota LiteAce/TownAce
Daihatsu Hijet/Atrai

Toyota Liteace 1993 Pictures 1
Toyota

Now, this list is quite interesting. I’m not aware of an “Isuzu Mini Truck” or even an Isuzu Kei truck of any kind. The smallest trucks Isuzu has sold are larger than Kei size. The same goes for the Toyota LiteAce (above) and the TownAce, which were sold in America in the past. Those vans are far larger than Kei vans. I’m also scratching my head a bit over the inclusion of the Nissan Clipper since that Kei vehicle launched in 2003, so they aren’t even legal to import yet, anyway.

(Update, June 21: Another report has come in of an RMV refusal to register a JDM 1996 Honda Civic. The state claims to be targeting Keis, but is applying the new policy to seemingly any JDM vehicle.)

Natasha explained to me that the state is targeting vehicles that do not meet FMVSS, with a focus on vehicles the state identifies to be in the Kei class. The RMV identifies a Kei vehicle through the above list and through a short VIN. The state’s logic is that this will be for safety since a Kei vehicle is not built to FMVSS.

I’m sure you can see the problem here. Not only does the above list include vehicles outside of the Kei class, but the state doesn’t seem to be aware that short VINs are not limited to Kei vehicles. A large Nissan Civilian bus will have a short VIN, as would a Toyota Century. I asked Natasha about how the state will interpret short VINs and she told me that they will be applied only to vehicles believed to be in the Kei class with a short VIN. The state is not looking to deny registration to vehicles imported from other countries, either. So, you could import a Japanese car that was sold in Europe and the state wouldn’t care. But that same car from Japan would be a problem.

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A bus longer than its VIN is – Car From Japan

Unfortunately, since the state doesn’t seem to be very good at identifying Kei vehicles, this means anyone trying to register an imported Japanese vehicle can be rolling the dice.

I also asked Natasha about the many enthusiasts with vehicles already registered in the state. She told me that as of right now, the state should not be looking to revoke their plates. However, Natasha also warned that could change after today’s meeting. Those who registered their vehicles in the past month or so may also see their plates revoked.

What I have been able to confirm is that no matter what happens in today’s meeting, Massachusetts will be moving forward with removing what it thinks are Kei vehicles from its roads. This will put enthusiasts into a bind and some people are already considering registering their vehicles in Montana to avoid this debacle.

What You Can Do Right Now

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Too much truck for Massachusetts – Car From Japan

Unfortunately, if you’ve followed my work for long enough, you will know where I’m going with this. It would appear that Massachusetts is following guidance issued by the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators. I’ve written about these folks so much I can almost recite them like poetry, but click here to learn more about the AAMVA and why it’s a problem.

The group has been coming down hard on imported vehicles since the summer of 2021, with the publishing of a document instructing member states to ban any vehicle that doesn’t meet FMVSS. They’re the reason why so many states are suddenly banning vehicles seemingly out of nowhere. The crazy part about all of this is while the AAMVA has an ax to grind against Kei trucks, the group really wants to remove all gray market imports from America. So, if you’re a fan of any once-forbidden fruit from anywhere, not just tiny cars from Japan, you will want to do what you can to stop the spread of these bans.

Texas and North Carolina saw great success. They didn’t sue their state. Instead, they collaborated with their states’ lawmakers and DMV administrators. They educated their lawmakers and DMVs on what Kei vehicles are and why they should be legal. North Carolina’s enthusiasts won the privilege to drive Kei trucks on the road in 2019 while Texas was the first to beat the post-2021 AAMVA recommendations.

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Banned before it’s even legal to import. – Nissan

Enthusiasts in Texas and North Carolina recommend banding groups together to change laws and policies through collaboration rather than fighting. Sadly, the folks of Georgia can tell you that a lawsuit isn’t cheap nor quick. Remember that a state essentially has unlimited money to drag out a case as long as it wants to.

Of course, sometimes the state just doesn’t want to hear it. That’s the nightmare being faced by people in Maine and Rhode Island right now. Eventually, you may end up left with no other choice than sliding a lawyer into the courtroom.

As always, we’ll continue monitoring the imported vehicle situation in America and update you when we have news. We’re also working on getting closer into the AAMVA to answer the question of “why?” The AAMVA has yet to answer why it cares so much about Kei vehicles and we intend on finding it out. Until then, hold your cars tight and it might be worth befriending a politician or a few.

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89 thoughts on “Massachusetts Is Banning Cars From Japan Without Telling Enthusiasts Why

  1. Stil doesn’t make any sense that you can drive a motorcycle or ATV on a public road, but somehow Kei vehicles aren’t safe enough. You can drive an American vehicle with no seatbelts as long as it predates the law that made them required. Seems like the AAMVA has a bone to pick. Maybe they challenged a hooned out Honda Acty to a race at a stoplight and lost.

    1. Incorrect. US Seat belt laws have become year of manufacture irrelevant.

      If Johnny Law says you gotta wear a seatbelt in order to operate a vehicle, you gotta belt up.

  2. Stil doesn’t make any sense that you can drive a motorcycle or ATV on a public road, but somehow Kei vehicles aren’t safe enough. You can drive an American vehicle with no seatbelts as long as it predates the law that made them required. Seems like the AAMVA has a bone to pick. Maybe they challenged a hooned out Honda Acty to a race at a stoplight and lost.

  3. Masshole here. I see some Kei cars around and I’ve been half-heartedly telling my wife that we should get one, but not now. That said, we are going to Japan for two weeks this fall and I look forward to hitting an auto museum or two- any recommendations would be welcome.

    1. This is an excellent website https://japanesenostalgiccar.com/
      which has posted many times about such places to visit in Japan. Not sure if they’ve ever aggregated recommendations into a single post but they have tags on their articles so a little searching on the website should provide some results. Plus, it’s a fun website to browse anyway which makes up for any inconvenience in searching so it’s all good.

  4. Masshole here. I see some Kei cars around and I’ve been half-heartedly telling my wife that we should get one, but not now. That said, we are going to Japan for two weeks this fall and I look forward to hitting an auto museum or two- any recommendations would be welcome.

    1. This is an excellent website https://japanesenostalgiccar.com/
      which has posted many times about such places to visit in Japan. Not sure if they’ve ever aggregated recommendations into a single post but they have tags on their articles so a little searching on the website should provide some results. Plus, it’s a fun website to browse anyway which makes up for any inconvenience in searching so it’s all good.

  5. What a fucking joke. Wanna register an electric behemoth with razor sharp edges that represents danger to everyone else on the road? Yes, that is 100% legal. Now please excuse me, we gotta reconvene to take all these small, slow japanese cars off the roads, because they’re soooo dangerous. Imagine if one finds itself in the path of a Cybertruck whose driver is filming their mandatory Cybertruck tik tok video of the day?

      1. Yes, that is precisly my point – that somehow the CT meets saftey regulations that Kei cars don’t, despite the CT posing way more danger to others than any Kei car. And if the issue is occupants, please show me one american car from up until the 80s that meets today’s saftey standards. Are those being taken off the roads too?

  6. What a fucking joke. Wanna register an electric behemoth with razor sharp edges that represents danger to everyone else on the road? Yes, that is 100% legal. Now please excuse me, we gotta reconvene to take all these small, slow japanese cars off the roads, because they’re soooo dangerous. Imagine if one finds itself in the path of a Cybertruck whose driver is filming their mandatory Cybertruck tik tok video of the day?

  7. The noose is tightening around Connecticut. I wonder how nervous the two Kei car dealers around the corner from me are feeling right now after investing in the inventories they have.

  8. The noose is tightening around Connecticut. I wonder how nervous the two Kei car dealers around the corner from me are feeling right now after investing in the inventories they have.

  9. THIS. MEANS. WAR. Banning kei trucks is no longer a spectacle, it is a pattern. Kei car and import enthusiasts need their own national lobbying organization ASAP.

  10. THIS. MEANS. WAR. Banning kei trucks is no longer a spectacle, it is a pattern. Kei car and import enthusiasts need their own national lobbying organization ASAP.

    1. Always have.
      Same for inspections. Guess who makes money when cars require service to pass, or have too many expensive repairs that replacing looks attractive to the customer…

    1. Always have.
      Same for inspections. Guess who makes money when cars require service to pass, or have too many expensive repairs that replacing looks attractive to the customer…

    1. This is America. Freedom means the right to drive an oversized dually, amass an arsenal of various firearms and treat women, non-white ethnicities and the LGBT community as a punchline created for white people’s amusement.

        1. Well, to be fair Kei cars are clearly a communist plot to turn children into gay muslim abortion doctors who vote democrat.

    1. This is America. Freedom means the right to drive an oversized dually, amass an arsenal of various firearms and treat women, non-white ethnicities and the LGBT community as a punchline created for white people’s amusement.

        1. Well, to be fair Kei cars are clearly a communist plot to turn children into gay muslim abortion doctors who vote democrat.

  11. Natasha explained to me that the state is targeting vehicles that do not meet FMVSS,”

    Well if that’s accurate, then that also means they should be targeting any vehicle made before 1971… since none of those meet FMVSS either.

    Idiots.

    1. On other articles about this sort of thing, I’ve said specifically that I want to see them go after all the muscle cars. Kei truck owners could sit back and relax if that happened, knowing there’s a huge enough contingent of muscle car owners who would be…annoyed enough to do something about it.

        1. But the Mass DMV has, which is why the Model T and muscle car arguments are as amateurish as they sound.

    2. Or, it means that they know they can’t get rid of vehicles that have been here for decades, but know that natural attrition means that fewer and fewer of these vehicles are actually driven every year, and they don’t want to suddenly want to start having more non-FMVSS compliant vehicles on the road.

      1. There is a big difference between importing individual high-value JDM (or any non-Federalized) vehicles and two lots in my town being full of these little Kei trucks.

        As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, and it seems like the Texas group seems to have figured out, the restrictions put on essentially identical vehicles back in the day that precluded their registration means that these things are being treated differently than other 25+ year-old non-Federalized vehicles.

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