Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Drivers to roll a 7

Wisconsin to issue first seven-digit license plates as six characters are nearly gone

- MEG JONES

Wisconsin license plates will soon sport an additional character.

With the supply of six-character license plates rapidly dwindling, the state Department of Transporta­tion expects to begin issuing sevenchara­cter plates later this month.

Division of Motor Vehicle offices and third-party vendors will continue issuing the six-character plates until their inventory is exhausted. The plates will still look the same — white with the farm/sailboat scene across the top and “America’s Dairyland” across the bottom.

“We’re currently in the Z’s and we’re about to run out in the next week,” said Jeremy Krueger, Division of Motor Vehicles plate room supervisor. “By moving the letters back to the front of the plate and adding four numbers, it opens up a large range of license plates. They’ll last us for a long time now.”

Department of Correction­s prisoners have already started making the seven-character plates.

Wisconsin plates have featured six characters since 1986. The current design reversed from letters first to numbers first in 2000 when the red lettering was phased out because it was difficult to see. The new configurat­ion will return to letters first beginning with AAA and then followed by four numbers.

The six-character plates

yielded around 20 million different combinatio­ns even when the letters I, O and Q were not used because they resemble numbers.

The seven-character plates will provide up to 100 million different combinatio­ns.

Considerin­g the state’s population and the roughly 3.5 million vehicles now traversing roads clad in standard Wisconsin plates, it will take awhile to run out of license plate numbers.

Vehicle owners who already have difficulty rememberin­g their license plate number will probably find it just that much more difficult with another digit.

“We kept the alphas and numerics together separated by a dash to help remember them a little bit,” Krueger said. “We didn’t want to mix in alphas and numerics because it would be harder to remember that.”

For motorists whose license plates are so old the yearly stickers are stacked up on each other like a pastrami sandwich, don’t expect a new plate to arrive in the mail anytime soon. There are currently no plans to replace license plates. If their plates become illegible, however, drivers can turn them in for a replacemen­t.

Personaliz­ed plates have allowed seven characters for a while, though some specialty plates that feature logos have allowed only six characters because there’s not enough room.

“We’ve always had the real estate for the full seven digits — we just didn’t use it for the standardiz­ed plates. This is the first time we’ve had the need to move to something that large,” said Krueger.

 ?? WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA­TION ?? Jeremy Krueger, plate room supervisor for the Wisconsin Department of Transporta­tion, holds an example of the new seven-digit license plates.
WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA­TION Jeremy Krueger, plate room supervisor for the Wisconsin Department of Transporta­tion, holds an example of the new seven-digit license plates.

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