Uzbekistan is implementing a major reform of the system governing permits for international road transport of goods and passengers, introducing a more digitalized, transparent, and performance-based framework for national carriers.
The reform significantly restructures the processes of allocation, issuance, use, and monitoring of foreign and multilateral transport permits.
A key structural change is the introduction of a mechanism whereby foreign and multilateral permits will be issued directly at border customs checkpoints in the direction of departure.
This represents a departure from the traditional centralized allocation system and is intended to:
Dedicated permit issuance points will be established at border posts to support this model.
The reform places strong emphasis on digitalization.
National carriers will be able to reserve required permits in advance through an automated system, up to 10 days prior to cargo loading. This introduces a planning mechanism that did not previously exist.
At the same time, a full electronic ecosystem is introduced:
This shifts the system toward real-time, data-driven management of international transport flows.
One of the most significant innovations is the introduction of a rating system for national carriers, which directly affects access to permits.
The ranking is calculated based on multiple performance indicators, including:
Based on this rating:
This introduces a quasi-market mechanism into what was previously an administrative distribution system.
The system introduces automated enforcement mechanisms, significantly tightening compliance:
This reflects a shift toward algorithm-driven regulatory control rather than manual supervision.
The new framework comprehensively regulates the full lifecycle of permits:
It also establishes rules for:
For market participants, the reform introduces a fundamentally new operating environment:
Overall, the system evolves from an administrative allocation model into a hybrid digital-regulatory framework combining automation, ranking, and enforcement mechanisms.
While the regulation has already been adopted, the core operational changes including border issuance and digital permit mechanisms will apply from 1 June 2026.