What this means for your DMV renewal
- Listed as STAR-capable, so this can clear a STAR-required notice.
- Not flagged as test-only — likely a full-service shop that can also fix a failure on the same visit.
- Walk-in policy unclear — phone to confirm before driving over.
- Diesel not listed — verify by phone if you have a diesel.
Where to find them
Storefront
Service details
Plain-English notes on each inspection type this station mentions, plus a 7-row source-attribution matrix so you can see where each signal came from.
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01
What "STAR certified" actually means
STAR is California's higher-tier certification for smog stations. The DMV randomly directs about 1 in 10 vehicles to a STAR-only station, plus all gross-polluters and most directed retests. If your renewal notice says "STAR station required," a regular shop legally can't certify you.
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02
What a standard smog check covers
For a modern car (1996+ gas), it's mostly an OBD-II scan plus a visual inspection of the emissions hardware. Older vehicles may also get a tailpipe sniff and a fuel-cap pressure test. The whole sequence runs 15–25 minutes when there's no queue.
Source attribution — all 7 signals
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01.
STAR certified
● On their website
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07.
Smog check
● On their website
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02.
Test-only station
○ Not sure — ask
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03.
No appointment needed
○ Not sure — ask
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04.
Fast pass
○ Not sure — ask
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05.
DMV renewal support
○ Not sure — ask
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06.
Diesel smog check
○ Not sure — ask
PREP CHECKLIST
Before you drive over
The four things to check before pulling out of your driveway — what to bring, whether you even need a check this cycle, the rule that applies in your state, and the questions everyone asks.
1 · Bring with you
- Registration renewal notice (the postcard or PDF from the DMV)
- Current vehicle registration card
- Driver's license or photo ID
- Payment — most stations take cash and card; the certificate fee is separate from the inspection
- Vehicle title, only if this is a change-of-ownership or out-of-state transfer test
2 · When you can skip
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Car under 8 model years (CA)
Most California vehicles under 8 model years pay a smog abatement fee at renewal instead of getting an inspection.
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Hybrid + zero-emission
Battery-electric and most hybrids are exempt from the routine biennial check, though some still need a one-time inspection on transfer.
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Gas car older than 1976
Pre-1976 gas vehicles in California are exempt from the smog program entirely. Other states draw the line at different model years.
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Family transfer (some states)
Title transfers between immediate family in California don't trigger a new smog check if the previous one is still current. Confirm in your state.
3 · The rule in CA
California requires a smog check every two years for most vehicles older than six model years, and on every change-of-ownership or out-of-state registration. The state runs a tiered system: regular smog stations cover routine renewals, while STAR-certified shops handle directed tests, gross polluters, and the DMV-flagged 1-in-10 random selections. If your renewal notice prints "STAR station required," a regular shop can't legally certify you. Diesel rules apply to most light-duty diesels from 1998 model year forward under 14,000 lbs.
4 · Common questions
How long does a typical smog check take?
About 15–25 minutes of actual inspection work for a modern OBD-II vehicle. The variable is wait time — a busy Saturday can mean an extra 30–60 minutes in line, while a Tuesday morning is often walk-right-in. Diesel and older tailpipe-test vehicles can take a bit longer.
How much does a smog check cost?
Costs vary by state and station. In California, expect roughly $30–$70 for the inspection plus an $8.25 state certificate fee (separate). STAR stations sometimes charge a few dollars more. Always ask whether the quoted price includes the certificate fee.
What's the difference between a STAR station and a regular smog station?
STAR is California's higher-tier certification. The state directs about 1 in 10 vehicles to STAR-only stations randomly, plus all gross-polluters and most directed retests. A regular station can handle most renewals, but if your DMV notice flags STAR, you have to use a STAR shop specifically.
What happens if my car fails the smog check?
You'll get a printout listing what failed. A test-only station can't do the repair, so you'd need a separate repair shop, then come back for a retest. In California, you may also qualify for the state's repair-assistance program if you meet income limits — ask the inspector before driving off.
Do I need to bring anything besides my car?
Bring your registration renewal notice, current registration card, ID, and a payment method. For change-of-ownership or out-of-state transfer tests, also bring the title. The shop electronically reports your pass to the DMV — you don't mail anything in.
Can I just drive somewhere without a current smog certificate?
If your registration is still valid, yes — the smog requirement is tied to renewal, not to driving. But once your registration expires, you can be ticketed and the DMV won't accept the renewal payment until the smog certificate is on file.
Can Sunnyvale Discount Smog - Star Certified Check Station run a STAR-required test?
STAR certification appears on this listing, so they can usually handle DMV-directed tests. Confirm by phone that the certification is currently active — STAR status can be suspended without notice when a station fails an audit.
Listing description
Sunnyvale Discount Smog - Star Certified Check Station, based in San Jose, CA, mentions smog check and STAR certification on its own website. They list STAR Certified and Smog Check as services. In California, smog checks are required every two years for most cars over six model years old, plus on change-of-ownership and out-of-state registrations. If your DMV notice says "STAR station required," you need a STAR-certified shop specifically. A quick phone call will tell you the wait time, what paperwork to bring (registration renewal notice, current registration card), and how they handle the DMV side.