Drivers will have to cut out their own vehicle tax discs during the death throes of the paper system.
For years, motorists have been carefully tearing the disc from perforated paper in an annual challenge to which some have a sentimental attachment.
But the paper system will be replaced by an electronic system on 1 October.
The Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency (DVLA) has now run out of perforated paper and will print in-house instead.
"Tax discs can be expensive to produce and we have always planned to run down stocks in the run up to 1 October," said a spokeswoman for the DVLA.
Origin of car tax: Commons in 1888
Chancellor George Goschen: Apart from the Carriage Tax, which is a tax mainly on the more luxurious carriages - carriages, used for pleasure - there is at present no tax on any other vehicles, however much they may destroy the roads.
We propose to put a duty of £1 a-year upon every vehicle exceeding 10 cwt. in weight, a very moderate limit to take.
Members will acknowledge that the principle that all those who use the roads should pay for them, and should pay in some proportion to the wear and tear that they cause, is just. But I have not yet exhausted the subject. We propose, also, to put a very small Wheel Tax upon every vehicle.
Colonel Nolan, MP for Galway North: Not on carts?
Chancellor Goschen: Yes. We propose a duty of 2s. 6d. per wheel upon all carts over 2 cwt.
Colonel Nolan: Oh!
"To make sure we deliver the best possible savings to the taxpayer we have not procured more stock for these last few weeks, and will instead print the remaining discs in house."
That means drivers will have a cut out and keep disc if they renew their tax in the final few weeks of dispatch.
This only applies if the disc comes directly from the DVLA. The Post Office, which also supplies tax discs, has its own stock of perforated discs that it will continue to use.
Move into 'modernity'The disc was introduced in 1921 but officials say it is no longer needed with the DVLA and police now relying on an electronic register.
Chancellor George Osborne announced in his Autumn Statement in December that a new system would allow people to pay the charge by monthly direct debit.
The Treasury said it showed government was moving "into the modern age".
Vehicle tax was introduced in the 1888 Budget and the system of excise duty applying specifically to motor vehicles was introduced with the Roads Act 1920, with the tax disc appearing the following year.
DVLA prints cut out and keep tax disc
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