Use the Canada hub as a compact orientation page. Thin provincial pages have been removed from the live surface until they can carry stronger local detail.
Traffic Fines in Canada
Calculate traffic fines across Canada. Speeding, parking, red light, phone use — get estimated penalties and next steps.
Why drivers use this guide
Built for quick estimates, next-step guidance, and deeper local browsing.
Country decision layer
What this page should help you decide
If the issue is urgent, compare the general decision guides first instead of browsing a long set of shallow local pages.
No live ticket hub yet
This country stays available as a short orientation page, but low-value ticket and local pages have been removed until there is enough specific content to justify them.
Regions covered in the source data
How to use Canada traffic fine information
A country-level page is most useful when it helps you decide which question matters next. The cash amount is only one part of the result.
Start with the consequence you care about
Insurance, points, deadlines, license status, and appeal pressure often matter more than browsing another local landing page.
Open a live ticket hub only when it matches your issue
The retained ticket hubs are focused on searches where a broad country-level comparison can still help before a driver makes a decision.
Use guides for the pay-versus-contest question
If you already know the ticket type but are unsure what to do, a short decision guide is usually more useful than a thin local page.
Decision guides for Canada visitors
Use these short guides when the next question is about insurance, points, deadlines, or whether the ticket is worth contesting.
Use a short decision check to decide whether a traffic ticket may be worth contesting before you pay it.
See why traffic ticket points can outlast the fine and what to check before assuming the record impact is small.
Understand what can happen after a missed traffic ticket deadline and which retained hub or official source to check next.
Need help fighting this ticket?
A qualified traffic lawyer in canada may be able to reduce your fine, dismiss charges, or keep points off your record. Many offer free consultations.
Find a Traffic Lawyer →Frequently Asked Questions
Can I fight a traffic ticket in Canada?+
Yes, in most cases you have the right to contest a traffic ticket. Options include attending court, hiring a traffic lawyer, or in some areas, completing a defensive driving course to reduce penalties.
Will a traffic fine affect my car insurance?+
Moving violations like speeding or running a red light often lead to higher insurance premiums. The impact depends on your insurer, driving history, and the severity of the offense.
How long does a traffic violation stay on my record?+
The duration varies by jurisdiction. In many places, minor violations remain on your record for 3–5 years, while serious offenses like DUI can stay much longer.
Methodology and data notes
Last updated
This Canada page was reduced to a country-level decision hub so it no longer links into low-value local or scenario pages.
Coverage
Fine ranges shown here are estimates and may not include court costs, local surcharges, or case-specific adjustments.
Methodology
Country pages now keep only working links to live ticket hubs, retained guides, and core resources. Removed local pages are not used as internal destinations.
Typical sources
- • Canada public penalty references and driver guidance
- • Structured country and violation data used for comparison context
- • General ticket-handling, insurance-impact, and deadline guidance