Motor vehicle services in Tennessee are managed by the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security — Driver Services. This page lists all available DMV services, current fees, and office locations based on data from the official agency website.
Last updated · Source: Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security — Driver Services · Methodology
Driver services under Dept of Safety; vehicle registration at county clerk offices. No state income tax.
The average wait at a Tennessee DMV office is approximately 30 minutes for a walk-in. Booking an appointment online through Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security — Driver Services typically reduces the wait to under 15 minutes. Early-morning slots (8-9 AM) and Tuesday/Wednesday visits are fastest.
Yes — Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security — Driver Services offers online renewal for most standard driver licenses, provided the license is not expired more than 60 days, you do not need a REAL ID upgrade, and you have no outstanding tickets. Online renewal takes 5-10 minutes and the new card arrives in 7-14 business days.
The federal REAL ID enforcement date is May 7, 2025 — after this date, a standard Tennessee license will not be accepted at TSA airport checkpoints unless it has the REAL ID star marking. Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security — Driver Services began issuing REAL IDs well before this date and recommends booking an appointment to upgrade.
Tennessee has 4 DMV office locations represented on this site, with the busiest concentrated in major metropolitan areas. Smaller suburban and rural offices typically have shorter wait times for the same services.
A standard Tennessee driver license is valid for 8 years from the date of issue. Renewal can be completed up to 6 months before expiration in most cases without losing any time on the new license.
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⚠️ Always verify with Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security — Driver Services
Fees, requirements, and wait times change. DMVPeek aggregates data from the official Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security — Driver Services website as of 2025, but the state DMV is the authoritative source. DMVPeek is an independent information resource and is not affiliated with any state government agency.