Not all driver’s licenses are created equal. While every state in the union issues its own version of the laminated card that grants Americans the legal right to get behind the wheel, a closer look at the data reveals a striking gap between the best and the worst — in document security, driver quality, and the rigor of the process itself.
A U.S. driver’s license is issued by individual states, not the federal government, so design and rules vary widely. Each license typically includes the holder’s full name, photograph, date of birth, address, and a unique identification number.
Most states now issue REAL ID-compliant licenses, marked by a star, which are required for boarding domestic flights. Licenses also indicate the vehicle class (e.g., passenger, motorcycle, commercial) and include security features like holograms and barcodes to prevent fraud.
Not Every Driver’s License Is Equal: Check the Ranking
California made the most dramatic move in 2025, overhauling a design that had not been substantially updated since 2010. The new card, developed with biometric security firm IDEMIA, carries a digital signature embedded in one of the two barcodes on the back — a feature that places California among the first states to adopt that level of document authentication.
The polycarbonate material resists tampering, and the anti-counterfeit elements are layered in a way that trained inspectors can verify at multiple levels. The redesign also stripped the magnetic strip from the card entirely, aligning California with modern federal standards. For a state that processes millions of licenses annually, the upgrade is not cosmetic.
The Lone Star State’s Driver’s License Made the List
Texas followed a similar path. The state’s Department of Public Safety rolled out new cards built from tamper-resistant polycarbonate, with personal information reorganized for faster visual verification and the REAL ID star laser-engraved in black rather than printed in gold.
The change was designed specifically to make counterfeiting harder, and it meets American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators standards that not every state has bothered to match.
South Carolina Went Furthest on the Security Front
The redesign introduced in July 2025 in South Carolina incorporated more than 40 distinct security features — laser engraving, wildlife imagery tied to state heritage, and a transition to centralized card issuance, the production method already used by 45 states and the District of Columbia. The shift away from on-site printing alone substantially reduces the window for document fraud.
But security features on the card are only one dimension of the story. The harder question is what a license actually certifies about the person carrying it.
New Jersey and New Hampshire Among the Best Licenses in America
New Jersey operates the strictest graduated licensing system in the country — it is the only state that meets the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety’s best-practice standard by requiring drivers to hold an intermediate license until age 17, the highest minimum in the nation. T
hat rigor shapes who earns a full license and what they know when they get it. The result shows up in the numbers: researchers at AutoInsurance.org, using data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the Insurance Information Institute, ranked New Hampshire, New Jersey, and Massachusetts as the top three states for driver quality in the country, measuring fatal accident rates and the proportion of uninsured motorists per capita and per miles driven.
New Hampshire stands out because the numbers are almost counterintuitive. The state has more licensed drivers per thousand driving-age residents than any other in the country — over 1,000 per 1,000 eligible people, according to Federal Highway Administration data — and yet a QuoteWizard analysis of more than two million insurance quotes found it produces the safest drivers in the nation by a clear margin.
The Most Difficult Licenses to Get
On the opposite end of the spectrum, a study by the law firm Siegfried & Jensen ranked all 50 states on exam difficulty, factoring in manual length, question count, and road test requirements. South Dakota came out at the very bottom of the difficulty scale, meaning it is the easiest place in the country to obtain a license.
Ohio ranked second-easiest, with a written exam of 40 questions and a $7 fee — one of the lowest in the country. Arkansas rounded out the top three for accessibility, requiring zero supervised driving hours before a road test, compared to Maine’s 70 hours, the highest mandatory supervised driving requirement in the nation.




