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California Class M motorcycle license (M1 & M2)

Reviewed by the DMVCA editorial team
Updated June 28, 2026·3 min read
Quick facts TL;DR · 4 bullets
Class M1 lets you ride any motorcycle, including on the freeway.
Class M2 covers mopeds and motor-driven cycles only.
Both cost $46 standalone (or $46 added to an existing license) and require a written test plus a skills test — or an approved CMSP course that waives the skills test.
You can hold a Class M on its own or add it to a Class C license.
M1 Motorcycles (any size, freeway)
M2 Mopeds, motor-driven cycles
Cost $46 (same as an add-on)
Tests Written + skills (or CMSP)
Min age 15½ permit · 16 license

Class M is California’s motorcycle license. It comes in two grades — M1 for motorcycles and M2 for mopeds and motor-driven cycles — and you can hold it on its own or add it to an existing Class C license.

This page is the quick version: the M1-vs-M2 difference, how Class M relates to your car license, and how to get one. For the permit rules, the California Motorcyclist Safety Program (CMSP) course, and the skills test in depth, see the full motorcycle guide.

M1 vs M2

The two grades differ by what they let you ride:

  • Class M1 — any two-wheel motorcycle, including on the freeway. This is the one most riders want. Minimum age 16 (permit at 15½).
  • Class M2 — mopeds and motor-driven cycles only (smaller-engine machines, no freeway riding). It’s a narrower license; M1 already covers everything M2 does.

If you’re unsure, most riders should get M1 — it’s the same fee and covers full-size motorcycles.

Class M vs Class C

They authorize different vehicles, and they’re independent:

  • A Class C license covers cars and light trucks up to 26,000 lbs — but not motorcycles.
  • A Class M covers motorcycles — but not cars.

If you drive a car and ride a motorcycle, you need both — which is why Class M is usually added to an existing Class C. If you only ride, you can hold a Class M on its own.

How to get a Class M

The process mirrors any other license, with a motorcycle-specific test:

  • Pass the knowledge test based on the California Motorcycle Handbook.
  • Pass a skills test, or complete an approved CMSP training course — which waives the DMV skills test and is required for riders under 21.
  • Apply at a DMV office with form DL 44 and pay the $46 fee (the same whether standalone or added to an existing license).
  • Riders under 18 must first hold a motorcycle instruction permit.

Where to take the test

Not every DMV office administers the motorcycle skills test. Before you book, check which nearby offices offer it — or complete a CMSP course to skip the DMV skills test entirely.

DMV offices with a motorcycle skills test

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About this guide

Published by
DMVCA· an independent California DMV information publisher
Fact-checking
Fact-checked against primary sources — the California Vehicle Code, DMV publications, and government sources — and cited on the page.
Update cadence
Reviewed quarterly and after any federal or state policy change.
Sources. California Vehicle Code § 12804.9 (license classes) · California DMV — Motorcycle license · California Motorcyclist Safety Program (CMSP)
Last verified June 28, 2026 · reviewed quarterly and after any policy change.
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