Florida traffic law reference · Broward County
Speeding ticket cost in Broward County, Florida (2025–2026)
Exact fine amounts, statutory citations, court costs, points, and license consequences for a speeding ticket in Broward County, Florida. Covers Florida's new dangerous excessive speeding law (HB 351 / §316.1922), red light camera programs, and the three options after you're cited.
Last verified: Reviewed against Florida Statutes ch. 316, 318, 322 and the Broward Clerk fee schedule
TL;DR
A Broward County speeding ticket costs $130 (6–9 mph over) to $605+ / mandatory court (30+ mph over), adds 3–4 license points under Fla. Stat. §322.27, and typically triggers a 3-year insurance increase of $300–$900. Unilegal defends civil speeding tickets statewide for a flat $99, with most cases resolving in 60–90 days without a courthouse visit. (2026)
- —A Broward speeding citation costs between $130 (6–9 mph over) and $605+ / mandatory court (30+ mph over).[1]
- —Broward sits in South Florida's middle pricing tier — totals run roughly $19 below Miami-Dade and within a few dollars of Palm Beach and Monroe. Five cities also operate red light camera programs.[3]
- —5 Broward municipalities operate roughly 30 active red light cameras; camera NOVs carry no points and no insurance impact.[2]
- —Florida's HB 351 (Ch. 2025-77, effective July 1, 2025) creates the criminal offense of dangerous excessive speeding under §316.1922 at 50+ mph over the limit, with mandatory court appearance and possible jail time.[7]
- —You have 30 days to pay, elect traffic school, or request a hearing. After 30 days a $16 late fee applies and FLHSMV may issue a D-6 license suspension.[5]
The statutory framework
Every speeding fine in Florida — including in Broward — is built from the same statutory base. Section §318.18, Fla. Stat. fixes the civil penalty for each violation tier, and each county adds its own court costs and local surcharges on top.[3]
“The penalties required for a noncriminal disposition pursuant to s. 318.14 or a criminal offense listed in s. 318.17 are as follows…”
Broward fine schedule, 2025–2026
Every total below reflects the civil penalty payable within 30 days of citation. “Statutory base” is the §318.18 fine; the difference is Broward court costs and surcharges.[1]
| Violation | Statutory base | Broward total |
|---|---|---|
| Standard moving violation | $60 | $160[1] |
| Non-moving violation | $30 | $115[1] |
| Seat belt violation | $30 | $115[1] |
| Child restraint violation | $60 | $175[1] |
| Speeding 6–9 mph over | $25 | $130[1] |
| Speeding 10–14 mph over | $100 | $205[1] |
| Speeding 15–19 mph over | $150 | $255[1] |
| Speeding 20–29 mph over | $175 | $280[1] |
| Speeding 30+ mph over | $250 | $605+ / mandatory court[1] |
| Red light (officer-issued) | $158 | $260[1] |
| Red light camera NOV | $158 | $158[2] |
| Failure to stop for school bus | $200 | $370[1] |
| School zone 6–9 mph over | $50 | $155[1] |
| School zone 10–14 mph over | $200 | $305[1] |
| Late fee (after 30 days) | $16 | $16[3] |
HB 351 — Dangerous excessive speeding (effective July 1, 2025)
Florida's 2025 legislative session passed CS/CS/CS/HB 351 (Ch. 2025-77, Laws of Fla.), which creates the new criminal offense of dangerous excessive speeding and is the source of §316.1922. Two distinct statutes now sit alongside the standard civil tier:
- §316.1922 (new, 2025) — criminaldangerous excessive speeding when a driver exceeds the posted limit by 50 mph or more, or drives 100+ mph in a manner that threatens safety. First conviction is a second-degree misdemeanor with up to 30 days' jail; second conviction within 5 years is a first-degree misdemeanor with up to 90 days' jail and possible license revocation. Mandatory court appearance.[7]
- §316.1926 (2008, unchanged by HB 351) — civilrouting statute that sends citations for speeding 50+ mph over the limit into Ch. 318 with mandatory court appearance. This is the older “super speeder” provision; it is not the new criminal offense.[14]
Red light camera programs in Broward
5 Broward cities operate an active red light camera program — roughly 30 cameras total — under the Mark Wandall Traffic Safety Act, §316.0083.[2]
Active programs: Pembroke Pines, Davie, Sunrise, Tamarac, West Park.
Camera ticket vs. officer-issued red light ticket
A camera Notice of Violation under §316.0083 is a $158 civil penalty with no points, no license consequence, and no insurance impact when paid promptly. The officer-issued version under §316.075 carries 3 points, a $260 Broward total, and is reported to your insurer.[1]
Points and license consequences
Under Fla. Stat. §322.27, the FLHSMV assesses points against your driving record for adjudicated infractions. The accumulation thresholds:[8]
- 12 points in 12 months → 30-day license suspension
- 18 points in 18 months → 3-month suspension
- 24 points in 36 months → 1-year suspension
Speeding 1–14 mph over is 3 points; 15+ mph over is 4 points; any speeding causing a crash is 6 points. A single adjudicated ticket rarely triggers suspension, but two within a year can.
What happens if you don't pay
- Day 0: Citation issued. You have 30 days.
- Day 30: If unpaid and no hearing elected, the Clerk enters civil judgment plus a $16 late fee.[5]
- ~Day 40: FLHSMV issues a D-6 license suspension under §322.245. Your insurance, employer (CDL holders), and any future traffic stop will see it.[5]
- Driving on a D-6 is a second-degree misdemeanor (1st offense) under §322.34 — separate criminal charge, jail-eligible, with cumulative license sanctions.[6]
- Clearing a D-6 requires paying the original fine + late fees + a $60 reinstatement fee + $6.25 service charge to FLHSMV.[5]
Your three options after a Broward citation
Option 1
Pay the fine
Fastest resolution. Pleads guilty. Points hit your record; insurer typically surcharges for 3 years.
Option 2
Elect traffic school
BDI election under §318.14(9). Withholds adjudication — no points, no insurance reporting. Limited to 5 times in a lifetime and once per 12 months.[4]
Option 3
Contest
Plead not guilty and request a hearing. An attorney can often negotiate withhold of adjudication without you appearing.
How to pay or contest in Broward
Broward County Clerk of the Circuit and County Courts
Brenda D. Forman, Broward County Clerk of the Circuit and County Courts.[9]
- Pay online
- Broward Fine Payment portal · 24/7 (Visa, MasterCard, Amex)
- Phone
- (954) 831-6565 (traffic division) · (954) 831-5588 (online payment help)
- Mail (check or money order)
- Brenda D. Forman, Clerk of Courts, P.O. Box 14610, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33302-4610
- Hours
- M–F 8:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. (excluding holidays)
Tools & forms
- D-6 license suspension status check — Broward Clerk lookup tool
- Traffic forms (contest + plea filings)
- Driving School Affidavit (BDI election)
- Approved BDI providers — FLHSMV statewide list
- Full fee schedule — all civil traffic infractions
The Clerk operates four regional courthouses. The Central Courthouse Complex (201 SE 6th Street, Fort Lauderdale — Traffic, West Building Room 01130) is the primary traffic facility, with North Regional (Deerfield Beach), South Regional (Hollywood), and West Regional (Plantation) covering the rest of the county.[9]
Recent enforcement in Broward
- 2025-01-09 — BSO DUI Task Force checkpoint in Pompano Beach (635 E. Atlantic Blvd.), 10 p.m. Fri Jan 10 – 3 a.m. Sat Jan 11, 2025.[10]
- 2024-12-13 — BSO DUI checkpoint operation in unincorporated Central Broward, 10 p.m. Fri Dec 13 – 3 a.m. Sat Dec 14, 2024 (holiday-period enforcement).[11]
- Standing — BSO DUI Task Force, DUI/Breath Alcohol Testing (BAT), and BAT Video divisions run saturation patrols during all major holiday periods plus St. Patrick's Day. Marine Unit + DUI Task Force conduct joint enforcement during holiday weekends.[12]
Insurance premium impact
A speeding ticket recorded against your Florida driving record typically surcharges auto-insurance premiums for three years. The ranges below reflect 2025–2026 Florida rate data published by Bankrate, Insurance.com, and The Zebra (all Quadrant-sourced). Per-carrier variance is extreme — Bankrate documents +8% to +185% swings on the same speeding citation depending on insurer.
| Violation | Premium change | Rating window |
|---|---|---|
| Speeding 1–15 mph over | +8% to +19% | 3 yr |
| Speeding 16–29 mph over | +19% to +31% | 3 yr |
| Speeding 30+ mph over | +20% to +45% | 3 yr |
| Reckless driving (§316.192) | +44% to +52% | 3–5 yr |
| DUI 1st offense (§316.193) | +53% to +58% | 3–5 yr |
| Red light camera NOV (§316.0083) | No change | — |
Why the camera NOV doesn't affect insurance: §316.0083(1)(b)(1) classifies the camera-issued violation as a civil penalty and explicitly directs that no §322.27 points be recorded. With no points on the FLHSMV record, insurance underwriters don't see it.[13]
Sources: Bankrate FL speeding-ticket rate study (Nov 2025); Insurance.com Florida speeding-ticket calculator; The Zebra Florida high-risk drivers data. Carrier-specific quotes can fall far outside these ranges.
Frequently asked questions
Got a Broward speeding ticket?
We'll handle it.
Upload a photo of your citation. A Bar-licensed Florida attorney reviews and resolves it — typically without you appearing in court.
Sources & citations
- [1]Broward County Clerk of Courts — Civil Traffic Fees and Costs page (2024–2025 fee tables, no consolidated PDF). https://www.browardclerk.org/GeneralInformation/FeesAndCosts · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [2]Fla. Stat. §316.0083 — Mark Wandall Traffic Safety Act (red light cameras). Civil NOV $158, no points, no insurance reporting. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0316/Sections/0316.0083.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [3]Fla. Stat. §318.18 — Schedule of civil penalties. Establishes the statutory base fines layered with county court costs. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0318/Sections/0318.18.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [4]Fla. Stat. §318.14(9) — Basic Driver Improvement (BDI) election. 5-times-lifetime + 1-per-12-months limits. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0318/Sections/0318.14.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [5]Fla. Stat. §322.245 — D-6 license suspension for failure to comply with traffic summons. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0322/Sections/0322.245.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [6]Fla. Stat. §322.34 — Driving while license suspended, revoked, canceled, or disqualified. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0322/Sections/0322.34.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [7]Florida CS/CS/CS/HB 351 (2025), Ch. 2025-77, Laws of Florida — Dangerous Excessive Speeding. Creates the criminal offense at §316.1922. Effective July 1, 2025. https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2025/351 · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [8]Fla. Stat. §322.27 — Florida point assessment schedule. 12 pts / 12 mo → 30-day suspension; 18 pts / 18 mo → 3-month suspension; 24 pts / 36 mo → 1-year suspension. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0322/Sections/0322.27.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [9]Broward County Clerk of Courts — Traffic and Misdemeanor Division contact and operational page (Clerk: Brenda D. Forman; 4 regional courthouses; (954) 831-6565; M–F 8:00–3:30). https://www.browardclerk.org/Divisions/TrafficAndMisdemeanor · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [10]Broward Sheriff's Office press release: DUI Task Force checkpoint, Pompano Beach (Jan 10–11, 2025). https://www.sheriff.org/PIO/BSONews/Pages/BSO-WILL-CONDUCT-D-U-I--CHECKPOINT--IN-POMPANO-BEACH.aspx · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [11]Broward Sheriff's Office press release: DUI checkpoint operation, unincorporated Central Broward (Dec 13–14, 2024). https://www.sheriff.org/PIO/BSONews/Pages/BSO-TO-CONDUCT-DUI-CHECKPOINT-OPERATION.aspx · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [12]Broward Sheriff's Office — DUI Task Force, BAT, and BAT Video Special Units overview (standing program). https://www.sheriff.org/LE/Pages/SpecialUnits/DUI.aspx · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [13]Fla. Stat. §316.0083(1)(b)(1) — Mark Wandall Traffic Safety Act. Civil NOV is not a moving violation; no §322.27 points; no insurance reporting when paid before escalation to a UTC under §316.0083(1)(b)(4). http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0316/Sections/0316.0083.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩
- [14]Fla. Stat. §316.1926 — Higher speeding penalties; mandatory court appearance for speeding 50+ mph over the posted limit (predates HB 351; civil routing into Ch. 318). http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0316/Sections/0316.1926.html · accessed 2026-05-30 ↩