What July 1 Brings for Drivers in Virginia, Florida, Indiana and Illinois
July 1 is the biggest date on the state legislative calendar, the day when laws passed in spring sessions take effect across much of the country. This year it brings a first in the nation speed limiter program in Virginia, citizenship status printed on Florida licenses, a lower licensing age in Indiana, a major change for senior drivers in Illinois and higher work zone camera fines in Washington.
Each change lands on a specific group of drivers, and several reach well beyond their own state lines. Anyone who drives through Virginia at triple digit speeds, renews a license in Florida or hauls a camper through a Washington work zone will feel these rules regardless of what their home plates say.
Here is what changes, who it affects and what to do before the date arrives.
Virginia: Speed Limiters Instead of a Suspended License
Virginia becomes the first state to put court ordered intelligent speed assistance on private vehicles. Under section 46.2-507 of the state code, effective July 1, 2026, a driver convicted of reckless driving at more than 100 mph must either enroll in the Intelligent Speed Assistance Program or lose their license. The court must impose one of the two outcomes, with suspensions running from six months to two years. Judges can also order the program for street racing convictions where they find good cause.
Enrolled drivers must fit a certified ISA device to every vehicle they own or have registered to them, and they commit an offense by driving any vehicle without one. The device uses GPS and a speed limit database to physically prevent the vehicle from exceeding the posted limit. Tampering with or attempting to bypass the device is a Class 1 misdemeanor. Based on comparable ignition interlock programs, installation is expected to cost $300 to $600 per vehicle with monthly fees of $75 to $150, paid by the offender.
Safety advocates see Virginia as the test case for a technology that Europe already requires in advisory form on new cars. Several other states have ISA bills in committee and will be watching enrollment numbers closely.
Florida: Citizenship Status on Licenses and What It Means at Renewal
From July 1, every Florida driver license and state ID card issued, renewed or replaced must display the holder citizenship status. Existing valid licenses stay valid until their normal expiration, and nobody is required to make a special trip to a license office. The change applies at your next routine transaction.
Drivers with expired licenses face the practical edge of the rule: continuing to drive on an expired card means driving without valid documentation, with the usual traffic penalties attached, and any renewal from July onward comes in the new format. People who become citizens after receiving a license can update their status and get a replacement card without paying a fee. Floridians whose licenses expire this summer can avoid lines by renewing online where eligible before the change beds in.
Indiana: A License on Your 16th Birthday
Indiana lowers its effective licensing age on July 1. Teens who complete an approved driver education course can now take the road test and receive a license on their 16th birthday rather than waiting the extra 90 days previous law required. The other requirements stay intact: at least 180 days on a learner permit, logged supervised driving hours, plus written and vision tests. Eligible 16 year olds can also add a motorcycle endorsement once requirements are met.
Parents weighing the change should know the data cuts both ways. Graduated licensing delays exist because crash risk in the first months of solo driving is the highest a driver will ever face. Ninety days is a modest difference, but families can impose their own passenger and night driving limits beyond what Indiana law requires.
Illinois: Road Tests Pushed Back to Age 87, Family Reporting Begins
Illinois has been the only state in the nation requiring annual behind the wheel tests for older drivers based on age alone. From July 1, the Road Safety and Fairness Act raises the mandatory road test age from 79 to 87. Drivers aged 79 and 80 renew in person with a vision test, drivers 81 to 86 renew every two years with a vision test, and only drivers 87 and older take the annual driving test. A written test still applies where a driving violation is on record.
The second half of the law is just as significant: immediate family members can now confidentially report a relative whose medical or cognitive decline makes driving unsafe, triggering a state review of fitness to drive. Lawmakers paired the two provisions deliberately, replacing a blanket age test with targeted reporting. State crash data showed drivers in their early 80s among the safest cohorts on Illinois roads.
Washington: Work Zone Camera Fines Rise as Cameras Spread East
Washington rounds out the July 1 changes by raising the penalty for a first work zone camera violation to $125, with second and subsequent violations at $248. The increase lands as the state expands its mobile work zone camera program to eastern Washington for the first time, with a camera deployed on Interstate 90 between State Route 904 and Geiger Road near Spokane during repaving. The violations are non moving offenses that do not touch your driving record or insurance, but they arrive by mail to the registered owner regardless of who was driving.
Wherever you drive this summer, the common thread in all five states is enforcement that follows the vehicle rather than the traffic stop. Check your license expiration date, slow down through work zones and assume a camera is watching even when no officer is.
Sources:
- https://law.lis.virginia.gov/vacode/title46.2/chapter3/section46.2-507/
- https://www.wfla.com/news/florida/this-new-florida-drivers-license-bill-takes-effect-in-july-heres-what-to-expect/amp/
- https://fox59.com/indiana-news/new-law-changes-indianas-minimum-driving-age/
- https://www.wandtv.com/news/statehouse/illinois-law-raises-mandatory-senior-road-test-age-from-79-to-87/article_5c058c46-aea2-4e69-b0b8-1b613bad9bf3.html
- https://wsdot.wa.gov/about/news/2026/speed-cameras-bring-another-layer-safety-eastern-washington-work-zones