. Difference Between SIMIT and RUNT: Complete Guide for Colombian Drivers in 2025 - Prime Journal

Difference Between SIMIT and RUNT: Complete Guide for Colombian Drivers in 2025

Arriving at a traffic office with all your documents and then discovering at the counter that you have an unpaid fine blocking your process — that costs time, money, and a wasted trip. Knowing the difference between SIMIT and RUNT prevents exactly that situation.

What is SIMIT and what information does it record

SIMIT — Sistema Integrado de Información sobre las Multas y Sanciones por Infracciones de Tránsito — is the national database of traffic tickets in Colombia. It was created by Law 769 of 2002 and is managed by the Colombian Federation of Municipalities. Every fine issued in the country, from a photo ticket in Bogotá to a speeding violation in Pasto, is recorded in this system.

When an officer issues a ticket, SIMIT registers it within one to three business days. From that moment, the driver can check the balance, pay the fine, and download the payment receipt on the official portal of the Colombian Federation of Municipalities:www.fcm.org.co/simit.

Law 1383 of 2010 establishes discounts on the value of fines. If the payment is made within five business days after notification, the discount is 50%. If the driver first completes the mandatory traffic course, a 25% discount applies. After those deadlines, the full amount must be paid along with late interest.

One point many drivers don’t know: SIMIT centralizes information from all municipalities in the country without exception. A ticket issued in Medellín will appear when the traffic authority in Cartagena checks your ID. The system operates nationwide. Searches by ID or the SIMIT Por Placa option are free on the official portal and do not require prior registration.

What is RUNT and what is it used for

RUNT — Registro Único Nacional de Tránsito — is the official system for vehicle and driver identification in Colombia. It was created by Law 1005 of 2006, regulated by Decree 019 of 2012, and operates under the supervision of the Ministry of Transport.

RUNT contains the status of the driver’s license, vehicle registration, SOAT validity, technical inspection results (RTM), and any legal liens or restrictions on the vehicle.

If you want to know whether a vehicle has a clean title before buying it, whether a license is valid, or whether a vehicle is reported stolen, that information is available atwww.runt.gov.co. The RUNT Por Placa search provides the full legal profile of a vehicle — registration, SOAT, RTM, and liens — by simply entering the license plate number. It is an essential tool before any purchase or transfer.

Unlike SIMIT, which deals exclusively with financial debts from traffic violations, RUNT does not record the value of fines. It focuses on the legal status of the driver and the vehicle, not outstanding debts.

How SIMIT and RUNT are connected — and why timing matters

The two systems communicate constantly. An unpaid fine in SIMIT automatically generates a restriction in RUNT. Without a SIMIT clearance, no process can move forward in RUNT.

However, this synchronization is not immediate. Here is the exact timing:

  • Online payments via PSE: between one and three hours to be reflected
  • In-person payments at Bancolombia, Davivienda, Banco de Bogotá, Efecty, or Baloto: up to 72 business hours
  • Holidays and long weekends: the window is extended; systems do not process in real time on non-business days

This delay catches many drivers. They pay the fine and have the receipt, but RUNT still shows a restriction because the update has not occurred yet. Showing up before the update means a wasted trip.

The solution is simple: confirm in RUNT that the restriction has been removed before leaving home.

What procedures are blocked by an unpaid SIMIT fine

Any balance in SIMIT blocks access to these procedures in RUNT:

  • Renewal or first issuance of a driver’s license
  • Registration of a new vehicle
  • Transfer of vehicle ownership
  • Change of vehicle characteristics
  • Duplicate license or registration card
  • License recategorization
  • Certification as a professional driver
  • Enrollment in driving school update courses
  • Authorization for vehicle export

One detail many people don’t know: if the fine is linked to the vehicle’s plate, the transfer is blocked even if the buyer has no debts. Both buyer and seller must have a clean SIMIT record. Partial payments do not unlock anything — the balance must be zero.

How to check SIMIT and RUNT before going to a traffic office

Step 1 — Check SIMIT first
Go towww.fcm.org.co/simit. Search by ID number or use the SIMIT Por Placa option if you only have the plate number. Review all listed tickets, including older ones.

Step 2 — Pay any outstanding balance and keep the receipt
Online payments are processed via PSE directly on the SIMIT portal. In person, payments are accepted at authorized locations like Bancolombia, Davivienda, Banco de Bogotá, Efecty, and Baloto. Always keep your receipt.

Step 3 — Wait for the synchronization window
Do not skip this step. Online: wait one to three hours. In person: wait up to 72 business hours.

Step 4 — Confirm in RUNT that the restriction is gone
Go towww.runt.gov.co and check by ID or using RUNT Por Placa. Make sure there are no active restrictions.

Step 5 — Proceed with your process
If restrictions still appear after the waiting period, contact the relevant traffic authority. Sync errors are rare but possible.

Can RUNT show suspensions that do not appear in SIMIT

Yes — and this causes a lot of confusion.

SIMIT only records financial penalties (fines). RUNT maintains a separate record of license suspensions due to point accumulation under Law 1383 of 2010. A driver can have zero balance in SIMIT and still appear with a suspended license in RUNT.

If a rental company or traffic office reports an issue with your license and you have no fines, check directly in RUNT. This is not an error — the systems serve different legal purposes.

The duration of a suspension depends on accumulated points and whether required courses were completed. It can range from months to permanent cancellation in serious repeat cases.

How often should you check both systems

There is no mandatory schedule, but checks are essential before any traffic procedure, before buying or selling a vehicle, and with enough time to resolve any issues — at least one week in advance.

Both SIMIT and RUNT offer free mobile apps for Android and iOS that allow basic checks without a computer. There is no reason to arrive unprepared.

Conclusion

Before any traffic procedure in Colombia, always follow this sequence: check SIMIT first, pay any outstanding balance, wait for the synchronization window, and confirm in RUNT that the restriction has been removed. Use SIMIT Por Placa when you only have the plate number. Use RUNT Por Placa to review a vehicle’s full legal history before buying or selling. Do these checks at least one week in advance — urgent processes rarely justify skipping verification.

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