Short version: it's a translated booklet that lets a rental desk or police officer in a foreign country read your domestic license. Long version below.
An International Driving Permit (IDP) is a multilingual document issued under the authority of the United Nations conventions on road traffic — the 1949 Geneva Convention and the 1968 Vienna Convention. It is, in practical terms, a translation of your domestic driver's license into ten official languages, bound into a small booklet that meets ISO and UN formatting standards.
It is not a standalone license. It is not issued by your home government, and it has no validity if your original domestic license is suspended, expired, or absent. Always carry both documents while driving abroad.
There are two competing UN frameworks. The 1949 Convention is older and remains in force in countries like the United States, Japan and India. The 1968 Convention is newer, broader, and used across most of Europe, Latin America and Asia. Some countries have ratified both. A few have ratified neither.
A standard IDP is the size of a passport (148 × 105 mm) with a grey cover. Inside it contains:
The first international driving certificate was issued in 1909 as part of the Paris Convention on motor traffic. Modern IDPs trace back to 1949, when 95 nations met in Geneva to standardise road signs, license formats and traffic rules in the aftermath of World War II. The 1968 Vienna Convention modernised and expanded the framework. Together they govern how millions of travelers drive across borders every year.
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