Accidents move fast. This guide doesn't. Every step below is attorney-reviewed and specific to New York City, New York law — so you don't miss what matters.
After an NYC crash, the responding officer files a Form MV-104A with the NYPD, which is then transmitted to the NY DMV. Unlike many states, NYC drivers cannot pull their report directly from the police department — the official copy is held by the DMV and requested with Form MV-198C. The report drives fault determinations, no-fault PIP processing, and any § 5102(d) threshold lawsuit, so getting it correctly and quickly is high-leverage.
Order your NYPD crash report (MV-104A) from NY DMV using Form MV-198C. The fastest path is the DMV online crash report search. Reports are typically available 14–30 days after the accident, cost $7 (online) to $15 (certified copy by mail), and can be searched by license/plate plus crash date.
- Where it lives: NY DMV (not NYPD) — the police file MV-104A, DMV stores it
- How to request: Online ($7), mail with Form MV-198C ($15 certified), or in-person at any DMV office
- Availability: ~14–30 days after the crash; up to 4 years archived online
- What it shows: Date, location, parties, insurance, damage, driver statements, and the officer's narrative — not always a fault determination
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What You're Experiencing
You need the NYPD crash report for an insurance claim, your own records, or to start a no-fault PIP filing — and you don't know whether to call the precinct, the DMV, or wait for it in the mail.
What This Likely Means
- If the precinct says 'we don't have it' → They do, but they're not the public release point — NY DMV is
- If 30+ days have passed and the report still isn't online → The officer may not have filed yet, or the crash may have been logged with a typo in the plate or date
- If the report shows errors that hurt your case → File a written correction with the precinct records officer before the no-fault deadline locks the narrative
Your Options
You Can Do This
- •File your own MV-104 with NY DMV within 10 days of the crash (required by VTL § 605)
- •Order the MV-104A online via dmv.ny.gov ($7) or by mail with Form MV-198C ($15 certified)
- •Search by your license number, plate, and crash date in the DMV online system
- •Photograph the scene, vehicles, and your injuries the same day for an evidentiary backup
Attorney Handles
- •Subpoenas the NYPD records division for an expedited MV-104A copy when the no-fault clock is running
- •Files written corrections with the precinct records officer for narrative or factual errors
- •Cross-references the MV-104A against EDR data, traffic camera footage, and witness statements
- •Preserves NYC DOT camera footage within the 24–72 hour overwrite window
Avoid Doing This
- •Don't rely on a verbal account from the responding officer — only the filed MV-104A counts
- •Don't sign any statement to your insurer before the report is in your hands
- •Don't wait 60+ days to dispute errors — the no-fault narrative locks fast
What This Typically Costs
The MV-104A itself is cheap ($7 online, $15 certified by mail). The real cost is delay: each day without the report stalls your no-fault PIP filing (which has a 30-day notice deadline under 11 NYCRR 65) and gives the at-fault insurer time to lock in their version of fault.
When to Call a Professional
Contact an attorney immediately if any of these apply:
- 1
If the report contradicts your own MV-104 self-filing → File a written correction with the precinct within 30 days, before the no-fault narrative locks.
- 2
If the officer's narrative misidentifies the at-fault driver → This affects pure comparative fault percentages under CPLR § 1411 — call an attorney before filing the no-fault claim.
- 3
If your serious injury threshold (§ 5102(d)) lawsuit depends on the report → Subpoena the NYPD records division for an expedited certified copy.
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Get Free Case Review →Key Numbers
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Online report fee (uncertified) | $7 | NY DMV — Get a Copy of an Accident Report |
| Certified mail report fee (Form MV-198C) | $15 | NY DMV — Form MV-198C |
| Typical availability after crash | 14 – 30 days | NY DMV processing times |
| Online archive window | Up to 4 years | NY DMV crash report search |
| NY 10-day driver self-report rule | Required if injury or > $1,000 damage | NY VTL § 605 |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- 1
Mistake #1: Calling the NYPD precinct to ask for the report.
NYPD doesn't release the MV-104A to the public — the official copy is at NY DMV. Going to the precinct adds a week or more before you realize you need to file Form MV-198C with the DMV instead.
- 2
Mistake #2: Skipping your own MV-104 self-report.
NY VTL § 605 requires drivers to file an MV-104 with the DMV within 10 days of any crash with injury or property damage over $1,000 — separate from the officer's MV-104A. Failing to file can lead to license suspension and undercuts your own version of events.
- 3
Mistake #3: Accepting the report's narrative as final.
Officer narratives in NYC crash reports often have errors — wrong direction of travel, missing witnesses, or omitted statements. Once the no-fault claim is filed, those errors get treated as established facts. File a written correction request with the precinct's records officer within 30 days.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How long after the accident before I can get the NYPD crash report?▼
Typically 14–30 days after the crash. The responding officer has 24 hours to file the MV-104A with the precinct, but it then routes through NYPD records and the NY DMV before becoming public-searchable. If you need it sooner for insurance or a § 5102(d) threshold determination, you can request expedited handling through an attorney's records subpoena.
What if the police didn't come to my crash scene?▼
If NYPD didn't respond (common for minor NYC crashes), there's no MV-104A. You're required to self-file an MV-104 with NY DMV within 10 days under VTL § 605 if there was injury or over $1,000 damage. Skipping the self-report can hurt both your insurance claim and your ability to bring a § 5102(d) lawsuit later.
What if the police report has errors?▼
Submit a written correction request to the precinct's records officer with photos, witness statements, or any evidence supporting the change. Errors of fact (wrong direction, wrong vehicle, omitted witnesses) can be corrected. The officer's opinion or narrative typically can't be changed, but your version of events can be added as an addendum.
Sources & Citations
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