Cali pico y placa fines begin January 13 after successful pedagogical phase

After a penalty-free pedagogical week from January 5-9, Cali enforces pico y placa fines starting Monday, January 13, 2026. The vehicle restriction, active Monday-Friday 6 a.m.-7 p.m. until June 30, now includes traffic tickets for violations.

As announced in prior coverage of Cali's 2026 pico y placa rotation (plates 1-2 Monday, 3-4 Tuesday, etc.), the measure's initial week focused on driver education without sanctions. This phase concluded successfully on January 9, transitioning to full enforcement on January 13.

Violators now face economic fines from traffic agents. Exemptions remain unchanged: emergency vehicles, official/diplomatic cars, disability transports, motorcycles, hybrids/electrics, heavy cargo trucks (5+ tons), and congestion fee payers.

Mobility authorities urge checking plate restrictions via official apps or channels to avoid tickets, and encourage public transport or alternative mobility options for smoother traffic.

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Pilgrims walking to Basilica of Guadalupe during Hoy No Circula restrictions in CDMX, with police enforcing vehicle rules.
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Hoy No Circula restrictions during Virgin of Guadalupe festivities in CDMX

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The Hoy No Circula program runs normally on December 11 and 12, 2025, in Mexico City and surrounding State of Mexico municipalities, overlapping with pilgrimages to the Virgin of Guadalupe. Vehicles with green stickers (December 11) and blue stickers (December 12) face restrictions to cut air pollution. Authorities warn of fines for violations.

Starting January 5, 2026, Cali begins a new pico y placa rotation to enhance mobility and cut vehicle congestion through the first semester. The restriction runs Monday to Friday from 6:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m., beginning with a pedagogical phase without penalties.

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The Hoy No Circula program returns to its standard schedule on Thursday, January 8, 2026, in Mexico City (CDMX) and the State of Mexico (Edomex), restricting private vehicles with green stickers and plates ending 1-2 from 5:00 to 22:00 in the usual 16 CDMX boroughs and 18 bordering municipalities. This follows holiday adjustments, with fines for violations to curb air pollution.

In the first 24-hour jornada of the Conduce Sin Alcohol Program in Mexico City, 72 drivers were sent to the Administrative Sanctions Center, known as El Torito, for exceeding the allowed alcohol limit. The operation, running until January 11, 2026, involved 13,422 tests at 1,130 checkpoints across the 16 boroughs.

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The Inspector General of the National Police Service, Douglas Kanja, has ordered an immediate nationwide crackdown on traffic violations following a sharp rise in road accidents just six days into the new year. The directive, issued on Wednesday, January 7, 2026, targets preventable errors such as drunk driving and speeding. The NPS has expressed concern and regret over the fatalities and injuries caused by these incidents.

Colombia's National Infrastructure Agency and Ministry of Transport announced that toll fees will rise by 5.10% starting January 16, 2026, based on last year's IPC variation as reported by Dane. Additionally, 15 tolls will see an extra increase due to the normalization process under Decree 050.

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In the second holiday-related activation within a week, the Metropolitan Environmental Commission (CAMe) triggered phase 1 environmental contingency for PM2.5 particles in the southeast zone of Mexico Valley on January 1, 2026, following high pollution from New Year's fireworks and poor weather. Key areas like Iztapalapa and Nezahualcóyotl saw extremely bad air quality. The measure was suspended later that evening as conditions improved.

 

 

 

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