Taylor County · 3th Judicial Circuit · Fla. Stat. §316.1895
Taylor County school zone speeding defense.
TL;DR
Taylor County school zone speeding (Fla. Stat. §316.1895) carries DOUBLE the standard speeding fine — typical totals $206–$606 — plus 3–4 license points and a 3-year insurance hit of +20%–28%. BDI traffic school is restricted: not available if 30+ MPH over the school-zone limit. $99 flat-fee defense in any of Florida's 67 counties. Filed within 24 business hours. (2026)
Last verified: Reviewed against Fla. Stat. §316.1895 and the Taylor County Clerk fee structure
The statute — Fla. Stat. §316.1895
“A speed zone established pursuant to this section must operate during those times of the regular school day when children are arriving at or leaving school. Fines for speeding violations within a school zone are doubled.”
Penalties under §316.1895
| Tier | Classification | Fine | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6–9 MPH over | Civil moving infraction (doubled) | $50 base → $100 + costs ≈ $206 | 0 |
| 10–14 MPH over | Civil moving infraction (doubled) | $100 base → $200 + costs ≈ $306 | 3 |
| 15–19 MPH over | Civil moving infraction (doubled) | $150 base → $300 + costs ≈ $406 | 3 |
| 20–29 MPH over | Civil moving infraction (doubled) | $175 base → $350 + costs ≈ $456 | 4 |
| 30+ MPH over | MANDATORY court appearance | $250+ base → $500+ + costs ≈ $606+ | 4 |
Insurance impact: +20% to +28% over 3 years per Florida carrier data — typical lifetime cost $480–$880. Higher than standard speeding because school-zone violations are categorized as 'enhanced moving violations' by most carriers. Withhold of adjudication or BDI election prevents the increase.
Common defenses
Taylor County school zone speeding cases turn on specific facts — the strategies below are common starting points our attorneys evaluate.
School zone not 'active' at citation time[1]
§316.1895 only applies during 'regular school day when children are arriving at or leaving school.' A citation issued before posted school-zone hours, during summer recess, on weekends, or during holidays is attackable. The state must prove the zone was active at the moment of citation — signage, flashing lights, or posted-hour evidence is the foundation.
Signage / signal defect[2]
Florida law requires conspicuous school-zone signage with operating hours posted. Faded signs, obscured by foliage, missing flashing beacons, or signs not visible from the approach lane are documented defects that have produced dismissals. Photographs from the citation location at the time of day are critical evidence.
Pace / radar / LIDAR calibration[3]
Speed measurement devices must be calibrated per FLHSMV protocols. Officer testimony must include calibration record, training certification, and proper technique. Pace timing requires a stretch of straight-line observation of typically 0.2 miles or more. Devices in school zones often face additional environmental interference (parked cars, building reflection) that complicates accuracy.
Lesser speed amendment[4]
Most contested school-zone tickets resolve with a negotiated speed reduction — from e.g. 18 MPH over to 9 MPH over. This drops the fine from the doubled higher tier to the doubled lower tier and preserves BDI eligibility. Attorney negotiation routinely produces this outcome on a first contested appearance.
Withhold of adjudication via attorney[5]
The most common positive outcome — attorney negotiates a withhold of adjudication, which means the citation is paid but no points are entered on the driving record. Available for school-zone tickets under 30 MPH over. Requires attorney appearance; the driver cannot self-negotiate a withhold.
What you should know
- Civil or criminal
- Civil moving infraction (criminal only if 50+ MPH over under HB 351 dangerous-excessive)
- Fine doubling
- All school-zone speed fines are DOUBLED per §316.1895
- Points
- 0 (6–9 over) / 3 (10–19 over) / 4 (20+ over and crash)
- Court appearance
- Mandatory if 30+ MPH over; optional otherwise
- BDI eligibility
- Yes for under 30 MPH over; NOT eligible at 30+ MPH over
- Active-zone requirement
- Citation valid only during posted school-zone hours when children present
Your three options in Taylor County
Option 1
Pay the fine
Fastest resolution but pleads guilty. Points hit your driving record; insurer typically surcharges premiums for 3 years. The doubled fine still applies even on quick payment.
Option 2
Elect traffic school
Basic Driver Improvement under §318.14(9) — only available if under 30 MPH over. Withholds adjudication. Limited to once per 12 months and 5 times in a lifetime.
Option 3
Contest with Unilegal
Plead not guilty and let a Florida-licensed attorney negotiate. Most contested school-zone cases end in either withhold of adjudication or amendment to a lower speed tier. Filed within 24 business hours.
Taylor County procedural context
Taylor County cases are filed in the 3th Judicial Circuit of the Florida State Courts. The primary courthouse is in Perry.
Find Taylor County information
- Taylor County Clerk of Court directory — payment, case status, hearing schedule
- 3th Judicial Circuit court directory — circuit clerk + judicial assignments
Educational reference, not legal advice. Outcomes depend on the facts of your specific Taylor County case. If you have a pending citation, consult a Florida-licensed attorney before deciding how to plead.
Frequently asked questions
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Sources & citations
- [1]Fla. Stat. §316.1895 — School-zone speed limits and doubled-fine schedule. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0316/Sections/0316.1895.html · accessed 2026-05-31 ↩
- [2]Fla. Stat. §316.183 — Unlawful speed (base statute referenced for tier and amendment). http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0316/Sections/0316.183.html · accessed 2026-05-31 ↩
- [3]Fla. Stat. §322.27 — Florida point assessment schedule (speeding under/over 15 MPH; with crash = 4 / 6 points). http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0322/Sections/0322.27.html · accessed 2026-05-31 ↩
- [4]Fla. Stat. §318.14(9) — Basic Driver Improvement (BDI) eligibility & court-appearance threshold. http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=0300-0399/0318/Sections/0318.14.html · accessed 2026-05-31 ↩
- [5]Ch. 2025-77 (HB 351) — Dangerous excessive speeding (criminal exposure for 50+ MPH over). https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2025/351 · accessed 2026-05-31 ↩