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Surrendering a driver’s license is one of the difficult choices older drivers face late in life. When an elderly driver is involved in a major crash, the fallout can follow them like a scarlet letter. Society is rarely sympathetic toward accidents caused by older drivers; their explanations are often received as protestations rather than acceptable justifications. According to 2025 traffic statistics, older drivers were involved in 45,873 accidents last year, and fatalities from crashes they caused accounted for 33% of all traffic deaths — roughly one in three.
On the 7th, ahead of Parents’ Day, Wonju City in Gangwon Province introduced a policy offering up to 200,000 KRW (about $150) to senior drivers who voluntarily surrender their licenses. The program targets drivers aged 65 and older and is called the “Senior Driver Voluntary License Surrender Support Project.” Wonju says it secured additional funding through a one-time supplementary budget and will allocate 85,700,000 KRW (about $64,275). The city plans to distinguish between active drivers and people who merely hold a license: applicants must demonstrate they drove after turning 65 to receive the 200,000 KRW benefit. The payment is a one-time lifetime allowance.
It is encouraging that the budget for supporting seniors who give up their licenses has climbed, but the 200,000 KRW incentive is out of step with reality. As the population ages, seeing taxi and bus drivers in their 70s has become commonplace. Compared with the Seoul metropolitan area, Wonju’s public transit is limited. If surrendering a license threatens someone’s livelihood, a program presented as voluntary can effectively become coercive. Research showing accelerated cognitive decline after older adults stop driving is an additional concern.
Surrendering a driver’s license is one of the most consequential personal decisions an older adult can make. I am not proposing an uncritical importation of Japan-style systems that pair surrender with generous benefits, nor should we rely on rosy promises about autonomous vehicles or advanced driver-assistance systems. The goal should be simpler: give seniors an honorable rationale to turn in their licenses. Many have kept a license in their wallet for decades for the sake of family and community; a dignified retirement for that credential is warranted. Pairing a modest cash incentive with an “Honorary Driver’s License Graduation Certificate” for those who voluntarily surrender their licenses could create a humane, mutually acceptable outcome.











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