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Two traffic fine systems are about to run side-by-side in South Africa 

In reality, motorists should understand that traffic fines may continue to be administered under different legal frameworks depending on jurisdiction and implementation status during the rollout period: the existing Criminal Procedure Act (CPA) process in some areas, and the AARTO administrative process in others.

South African motorists are being urged to take a more proactive approach to traffic fines as the country prepares for the wider rollout of the Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences system, better known as AARTO.

According to Fines SA, one of the biggest misunderstandings around AARTO is that it will immediately replace the current traffic fine system across the country.

In reality, motorists should understand that traffic fines may continue to be administered under different legal frameworks depending on jurisdiction and implementation status during the rollout period: the existing Criminal Procedure Act (CPA) process in some areas, and the AARTO administrative process in others.

This means that how a fine is handled may depend on where the offence took place, which authority issued the notice, and whether that authority has moved onto the AARTO framework.

“This is where many motorists may get caught out. A fine issued in one municipality may follow the current CPA process, while another may fall under AARTO. The practical risk is that people may ignore or misunderstand notices because they assume all fines work the same way,” says Barry Berman, CEO of Fines SA.

Under the current CPA system, many traffic fines are handled through the criminal-law process and, if ignored, may eventually lead to summonses, warrants or other legal consequences.

AARTO moves many traffic infringements into an administrative process, with set steps for notices, representations, enforcement orders and administrative penalties. It also introduces a national demerit points system, where repeat infringements can result in points against a licence and, if thresholds are exceeded, possible suspension or cancellation.

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Berman added, “AARTO changes traffic fines from being a once-off payment issue into something that can affect a person’s ability to drive. That is why motorists need to understand which system applies to their fine and what action is required.”

The current system vs AARTO

Criminal Procedure Act systemAARTO system
Fines are generally handled through the criminal-law processInfringements are handled through an administrative process
Unpaid fines can lead to summonses or warrantsUnpaid infringements can lead to enforcement orders and licence-related blocks
Disputes may move through court-related processesMotorists can make representations through the AARTO process
No national demerit points system currently appliesDemerit points may apply once implemented
The main risk is financial and legal escalationThe risk can include fines, admin penalties, licence consequences and demerit exposure

Berman says this distinction matters because motorists may receive different types of notices depending on where they are fined.

He explained, “A speeding fine issued in one municipality may still follow the CPA process, while another infringement in a different area may fall under AARTO. For consumers, this can become confusing very quickly if they are not actively checking and managing their infringements.”

Under AARTO, ignoring infringement notices could lead to administrative penalties, enforcement orders, licence renewal blocks and, once the demerit system is active, points against a driver’s licence.

He continued, “Motorists can no longer afford to treat traffic fines as something to deal with once a year when renewing a licence disc. The enforcement environment is becoming more data-driven, more integrated and more difficult to ignore.”

Fines SA says motorists should start preparing now by:

  • Checking outstanding fines regularly
  • Making sure licence, vehicle and address details are up to date
  • Monitoring fines across different municipalities
  • Settling valid infringements before they escalate

Businesses operating vehicle fleets will also need to prepare, as fines may be linked to company records, operator cards, driver nominations and business registration numbers.

He stated, “For businesses, traffic fines are no longer just an admin issue. They can become a compliance and governance risk if they are not properly monitored.”

Berman says the immediate priority for both motorists and businesses is to become more organised before the system is fully implemented. He concluded, “AARTO is not simply another traffic fine update. It changes how compliance is managed. The best thing motorists and businesses can do now is stay informed, check their fines regularly and avoid letting infringements escalate.”

Businesses can stay on top of fines for their fleet on platforms like the Fines SA portal at FinesSA.co.za.

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