Building a `client-centric’ LTO
‘Having your vehicle registered is not just proof that you have paid the necessary taxes and fees. It also ensures that your vehicle is roadworthy and legally using our roads’

LTO Las Piñas Chief Joselito Luarca said he is thankful that everything is being digitized, contributing to faster processing of transactions.(Photograph by Alvin Joseph kasiban for the Daily Tribune)
Responsible vehicle owners are those who make it a point to have their ride inspected, tested, and registered every year at the Land Transportation Office of their choice. This annual practice starts three years after the initial registration of a new vehicle expires.
Some people are discouraged in going to the LTO to have their vehicles registered because of the fear that the registration process might take a whole day to finish.
But unlike many decades ago when it would sometimes take forever to accomplish the registration of a vehicle, nowadays the registration process only takes half a day or even a couple of hours. And if one arrives at the LTO before 8 a.m., when it opens its gates to the public, expect to have a shorter stay at the agency.
"Having your vehicle registered is not just proof that you have paid the necessary taxes and fees. It also ensures that your vehicle is roadworthy and legally using our roads," explained Joselito "Bogs" Luarca, chief of the LTO Las Piñas District Office.
Luarca proudly revealed that LTO Las Piñas is among the busiest district offices that have been registering more than 750 motor vehicles a day. "It helps that there are many private motor vehicle inspection centers and private emission testing centers in Las Piñas. Plus, our FMC-LTO Compound, which is located along Alabang-Zapote Road, has a large parking space complete with canteens."
"We are like a one-stop shop where people could do all LTO-related transactions and accomplish them in just one day," he said.
Luarca wants to initiate improvements in LTO Las Piñas — like renovating the buildings or setting up additional structures — for the comfort of the transacting public. However, he won't be able to fulfill his plan since the FMC-LTO Compound is privately owned which the city government facilitated for the agency's use until 2041.
"We were then located within the City Hall compound, but soon the sheer volume of vehicles (not to mention the lack of parking slots) and people transacting daily became a problem. So in 2005, the mayor decided to transfer us to our present location."
The LTO Las Piñas chief said that since his team wasn't able to do any physical improvements inside the compound, he instead made sure that people were served better and faster, which they were able to do through streamlined application and registration transactions.


