How to Check All Vehicles Registered Under Your CNIC
Check all vehicles registered under your CNIC on MTMIS (mtmis.excise.punjab.gov.pk) — some portal versions support CNIC-based searches in addition to registration number searches. You can also visit the Excise and Taxation office with your CNIC to get a complete list of vehicles registered in your name.
Why Check Vehicles Registered Under Your CNIC
You might be surprised to find vehicles registered under your CNIC that you didn't register. This happens more often than people think — a used car you sold years ago but was never formally transferred, a vehicle registered fraudulently using your CNIC details, or a family member who registered a motorcycle using your documents without your knowledge.
Why it matters: vehicles registered under your CNIC mean any unpaid token tax, challans, or legal issues with those vehicles are linked to YOUR identity. If a vehicle registered in your name is involved in an accident or crime, police records point to you.
How to Check Vehicles on Your CNIC
- MTMIS (Punjab): Some versions of the portal support CNIC-based searches. Try entering your CNIC instead of a registration number. If the feature isn't available online, visit the Excise office.
- Excise Office in person: Visit your district Excise and Taxation office with your original CNIC. Request a list of all vehicles registered under your CNIC number. This is the most reliable method.
- Sindh/KPK: Similar services may be available through the respective provincial Excise portals or offices.
For individual vehicle verification: MTMIS by registration number. If you find vehicles that should have been transferred: ownership transfer process. For stolen vehicle issues: stolen vehicle check.
What to Do If You Find Unauthorized Vehicles
- Vehicle you sold but wasn't transferred. Contact the buyer and insist on completing the formal transfer at Excise. Until transferred, you remain the legal owner with all associated liabilities.
- Vehicle you don't recognize. This indicates potential CNIC misuse. File a police report and visit the Excise office to dispute the registration. Provide your CNIC and explain you didn't register the vehicle.
- Family member's vehicle. If a relative registered a vehicle using your CNIC (sometimes done for insurance or financing purposes), discuss getting the registration transferred to their own CNIC.
Preventing CNIC Vehicle Fraud
- Don't share CNIC copies casually. Vehicle dealers, rental companies, and others can misuse your CNIC copy to register vehicles in your name.
- Always complete formal transfer when selling. Don't accept "I'll transfer it later" from buyers. Same-day transfer at Excise is the only safe option.
- Check annually. Make it a habit to check vehicles under your CNIC once a year. Catching unauthorized registrations early is easier to resolve than discovering them years later.
- Mark CNIC copies. When providing CNIC copies for legitimate purposes, write the purpose and date on the copy (e.g., "For XYZ insurance only — July 2026"). This makes misuse for vehicle registration more difficult.
Sold a vehicle and buyer didn't transfer? You remain legally responsible for that vehicle — including token tax, challans, and any legal issues. Contact the buyer immediately and insist on completing the transfer at Excise. If the buyer is unreachable, file a report at Excise to protect yourself.
Vehicles Under Your CNIC — Owner Concerns
Visit your district Excise and Taxation office with your original CNIC and request a complete vehicle list. Some online portals (MTMIS Punjab) may also support CNIC-based searches.
It may be a vehicle you sold that wasn't transferred, or potential CNIC fraud. Contact the current possessor to complete transfer, or file a police report and dispute at the Excise office if the registration is unauthorized.
Yes. As the registered owner, you're legally responsible for token tax, challans, insurance liability, and any legal issues associated with the vehicle — even if you don't physically possess it. Complete formal transfers promptly when selling.
At least once a year. This is especially important if you've sold vehicles in the past, shared CNIC copies with dealers, or suspect your CNIC details may have been compromised.