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Get your motorcycle ready for transfer with a safety certificate – 100% mobile, wherever you are across the Gold Coast or Brisbane.
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Selling your motorbike or moving to Queensland?
You need a safety certificate – a physical or digital confirmation that says your bike is safe to ride (previously known as a ‘roadworthy certificate’).
If you transfer your registration without a valid certificate, you could be fined up to $700.
Luckily, getting one isn’t complicated.
Our mobile inspection service comes directly to you – anywhere from Moreton Bay to Coolangatta – and takes less than an hour.
And, if your bike isn’t up to standard, our approved examiners can perform simple repairs or replacements before conducting an inspection.
Call. Book. Pay.
It’s that simple.
You transfer your bike’s registration to a new owner.
You transfer your bike’s registration from another state to Queensland.
Getting your motorcycle certified is as simple as it looks.
Please make sure your vehicle is in a reasonably clean condition so our examiner can conduct a proper inspection.
Book
Call or book online – our examiners come to you.
Inspect
Get a safety report in under an hour.
Pay
After your inspection is complete, pay by cash, card or BNPL.
Every safety certificate inspection has 2 stages: a visual inspection and a road test.
Here’s what our examiners check your motorcycle for.
Once we’ve checked and tested your motorcycle, we’ll issue an on-the-spot report and, if your vehicle passes, a safety certificate.
Any vehicle under the right gross vehicle mass (GVM). Anywhere across the Gold Coast, Brisbane, or Ipswich.
All cars and other vehicles up to 4,500 kilograms GVM
Any make or model of motorbike, including modified bikes
Trailers and caravans with aggregate trailer masses of 750–4,500 kilograms
Taxis, rideshare vehicles, limousines, and hire vehicles up to 4,500 kilograms
Vehicles with 10 or more seats up to 4,500 kilograms
Public and school vehicles up to 4,500 kilograms
Trailers and caravans up to 10,000 kilograms
Mobile homes and motorhomes up to 16,000 kilograms
Tow trucks up to 4,500 kilograms and other trucks up to 16,000 kilograms
100% Mobile
Our approved examiners come to you – no waiting and no wasted time.
Any Vehicle
We can inspect and certify any car, motorbike, trailer, truck, or passenger vehicle.
One Stop
We’ll handle every service and certification your vehicle needs.
Moving to Queensland from another state?
You’ll need a safety certificate for your vehicle to be registered in the Sunshine State.
And, with our mobile inspection service, you can get yours wherever you live or work.
A safety certificate is a document that proves your vehicle has been assessed as roadworthy by an approved examiner. You normally need a certificate to transfer or re-register your vehicle.
Safety certificates can be digital or handwritten. Each one includes:
All certificates are lodged with the Department of Main Roads and Transport. Safety certificates don’t need to be displayed anymore, even if they’re handwritten (although some examiners may still have outdated blue safety certificates that mention a display requirement).
For anyone who isn’t a licensed motor dealer, safety certificates are valid for 2 months or 2,000 kilometres (whichever expires first) from the date of issue.
You can use the same safety certificate to register a motorcycle and then sell/transfer it, but you can’t use the same safety certificate for more than one sale/transfer. Each new transfer needs a new safety certificate.
Tail tidies – replacing OEM license plate holders with smaller, aftermarket ones – are legal, as long as they’re done right. If your bike has a tail tidy, make sure the mudguard still protects other road users against thrown-up mud, stones and water, and reduces the risk of other users touching the moving wheel. You don’t need to have a guard extending to a 45-degree angle.
You still need to have at least one red taillight fitted to the centre or right of the centre of your bike’s rear. That light needs to be 250–1,500 millimetres above ground level and visible from at least 200 metres away.
Your number plate also needs to be legible from at least 20 metres away in a 45-degree arc from your bike’s rear. It must be in an upright position relative to your bike’s axis, and not more than 1.3 metres above ground level. You also can’t have tinted, opaque, reflective or uneven plate covers.
Under the Transport Operations (Road Use Management—Vehicle Standards and Safety) Regulation 2021 (Qld), motorcycles built after February 1985 can’t exceed a stationary noise level of 94 A-weighted decibels. Motorcycles built before February 1985 can’t exceed 100 A-weighted decibels.
Read how stationary noise levels are tested here.