You can use them to proclaim your devotion to the Leafs, to offer free advertisement for your auto dealership or to protect your plates from wear.
But the frame surrounding your car's licence plate or clear cover over it is illegal.
"The licence plate cannot be obstructed in any way shape or form," explains Const. Clint Stibbe with Toronto Police's Traffic Services of the little-known law. "That includes things like spare tires, bumpers, objects that have been attached to the plate, plate covers, any number of different things."
Though Stibbe says officers' can exercise their own discretion, violating this section of the Highway Traffic Act comes with a $110 fine. He could not say how often Toronto write up tickets for licence plate infractions.
Plate covers and frames are easy to find at department stores, auto part and sports memorabilia shops. Even the Ontario government sells them.
NEWSTALK 1010 observed clear plate covers for sale inside a Service Ontario office at Etobicoke's Cloverdale Mall on Tuesday. The Ministry of Transportation and Service Ontario have not responded to our request for comment or clarification.
"Just because something is sold or is available to be put on a vehicle doesn't necessarily make it legal," says Const. Stibbe.
Stibbe says the rules are designed to help officers identify a car's origin at a glance, so anything that alters a plate's colouring or blocks it, even partially, is not allowed. Simply have your licence plate number clear is not enough.
"(Frames) have a tendency to cover the "Ontario" designation and the "Yours to Discover". On its face that doesn't' seem very important, but when you are dealing with a car that is going out of country or one that's coming in from say, the United States--if certain parts of those plates are covered, it would in some cases not allow the officers to know what state that plate may be coming from."
Stibbe says this can make tracking a vehicle down after a crime that much more difficult
In many cases a dealership will slap a branded frame on your car's licence plates before you drive it off the lot. But Stibbe says the fact that you did not screw them on yourself does not get you off the hook.
"In the end, the only person that essentially is going to be held responsible for it is the individual operating the vehicle."
http://www.newstalk1010.com/news/2015/07/14/licence-plate-frames-covers-illegal-police