When you forget your wallet at home, there’s a new backup in the Garden State: your phone. On July 23, 2025, Governor Phil Murphy signed into law a bill that authorizes the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission (MVC) to offer digital driver’s licenses—and even non‑driver ID cards—to residents’ smartphones and other mobile devices.
New Jersey now joins a growing cohort—15 states and territories, including California, Georgia, Utah and Puerto Rico—that have paved the way for mobile driver’s licenses, often called mDLs. Proponents say these digital credentials blend convenience (no more fumbling for a plastic card) with enhanced security measures, like cryptographic protections and instant remote updates.
Yet the rollout won’t be overnight. Under the new law, the MVC has up to 44 months to build and launch the system—meaning New Jerseyans might not see mDLs in their wallets (er, phones) until at least 2029. And because federal REAL ID standards still require a physical or federally approved digital license, New Jersey may need to seek a waiver from the Transportation Security Administration before its mobile IDs are accepted for airplane boarding and other Real ID uses.
Lawmakers went out of their way to bake in privacy and security safeguards. The statute explicitly:
- Prohibits requiring device surrender: No business, school or law enforcement officer can demand you hand over your phone to verify your ID.
- Disallows implied consent to searches: Merely flashing your digital ID does not give permission to comb through your messages, photos or other apps.
- Bars data misuse: Any information obtained while verifying a digital ID can’t be used later as grounds for a search warrant.
- Limits data sharing: The law forbids the collection, sale or sharing of underlying digital‑ID data beyond its intended verification purpose.
“Those are controls that privacy advocates have been calling for,” notes Keely Quinlan at StateScoop, reflecting a nationwide push—often dubbed “No Phone Home”—to ensure mDL programs don’t become troves of personal data.
“Digital driver’s licenses will make life easier for drivers across New Jersey,” Governor Murphy said at the signing ceremony, highlighting how residents won’t worry about forgetting or losing their plastic cards. Assemblyman Clinton Calabrese, sponsor of A3518, added that this common‑sense innovation should, in theory, reduce wait times at MVC offices by enabling electronic updates and remote renewals.
Still, some skeptics worry about over‑reliance on smartphones—what happens when your battery dies?—and the risk of hacking. Early mDL adopters in other states have tested offline verification modes and encrypted storage to address exactly those concerns.
The state set aside $1.5 million in its Fiscal Year 2025 budget to get the program off the ground, with those funds remaining available into FY2026. That slice of funding will cover everything from app development to backend security audits. The MVC will likely seek additional federal grants and industry partnerships—Apple and Google have rolled out mDL frameworks in other states, though it’s still unclear whether New Jersey’s system will plug into Apple Wallet, Google Wallet, or require a standalone state app (as Louisiana and New York have done).
Participation in New Jersey’s digital ID program is entirely optional. Residents can continue to carry their physical driver’s licenses and state ID cards without penalty. That choice respects the reality that not everyone has a compatible smartphone or feels comfortable storing sensitive credentials on a device.
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
