You can now report road rage, colorum, and hit-and-runs direct to LTO. Plus,
track if they actually got suspended.
Tired of posting dashcam clips on Facebook and praying they go viral before
anyone in government notices? Same. The LTO finally gets it. They just
dropped “I-Report Mo kay LTO Chief”—a new site where you can report reckless
drivers, colorum vans, or even sketchy LTO staff straight to the agency. No
likes, shares, or trending hashtags required.
Finally, a Way to Call Out Bad Drivers Without Chasing Clout
For the longest time, the unofficial way to get justice on Philippine roads
looked like this: film it, post it, tag 5 news pages, and hope it blows up.
If your road rage video hit 100k views, maybe—just maybe—LTO would step in.
That playbook is getting scrapped.
The Land Transportation Office launched I-Report Mo kay LTO Chief, a
dedicated reporting website that cuts out the middleman. You can now file
complaints about reckless driving, hit-and-runs, illegal “colorum” vehicles,
or even corruption inside LTO itself—directly on their platform. The link:
ireportmokayltochief.ph.
They soft-launched it for testing earlier this month, but it’s now live for
everyone.
Why this matters
LTO says the move lines up with RA 11032, aka the Ease of Doing Business
Act. Translation: less red tape, more accountability. Instead of your
complaint getting buried in Facebook comments, it goes into an actual system
meant to track and act on it.
You’re not limited to road incidents either. The site also takes reports
about problems with driver’s licenses, vehicle registration, and change of
ownership. Basically, if it’s LTO-related and it’s bugging you, there’s now
a lane for it.
The feature that’s actually cool: SCO tracker
Here’s where it gets interesting. The site has a Show Cause Order tracker.
If LTO issues an SCO to a driver you reported, you can check the status
online—from case updates to the final decision, like suspension or
revocation of their license.
That’s huge. Before, you’d file a complaint and hear… nothing. Now there’s a
way to see if something actually happened after you hit “submit.”
Bottom line
This won’t fix EDSA traffic tomorrow. But it does mean you no longer need a
viral video to get LTO’s attention. If you’ve got a legit complaint, there’s
finally a front door instead of screaming into the social media void.
Try it out at
ireportmokayltochief.ph
and see if the follow-through is as good as the launch.
ANY THOUGHTS?
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