Pay a court fine
You can pay court fines online. Speeding tickets and local council parking tickets become court fines if you don’t pay them on time.
What is a court fine
A Judge can fine you in court if you’re found guilty of an offence like drink-driving, disorderly behaviour or theft.
The court will send you a Notice of Fine, telling you:
- how much you have to pay
- the ways you can pay
- what happens if you do not pay
- what to do if you want to dispute the fine.
You have 28 days from the day the fine was ordered to:
- pay the fine in full, or
- make a payment arrangement with the court.
Check if you have a court fine
To find out if you have a court fine to pay, contact the Ministry of Justice. They can tell you:
- if you have a court fine to pay
- how much your fine is or what's left to pay
- how to pay your fine — you can pay online, over the phone, from overseas, or in person
- when it needs to be paid.
Find out if you have a fine or check your balance
All fines need to be paid within 28 days.
When other fines become court fines
Local councils, the Police, and some other authorities can issue you an infringement fee for:
- speeding
- illegal parking
- not registering your dog.
Paying a speeding ticket, parking ticket or Police infringement fee
If you do not pay the infringement fee in time, it’s transferred to the court and becomes a fine. A court cost of $30 is added to the original amount and you have 28 days to pay the new fine amount directly to the court.
Pay your fine
You have to pay your fine in full as a single payment, unless you’ve organised a payment plan with the court.
If you do not pay within 28 days
If you do not pay a court fine by the due date the court adds an enforcement fee of $102 to the fine. They can also:
- take money out of your wages, benefit or bank accounts
- clamp your car
- seize and sell your car and property
- stop you from travelling outside New Zealand
- suspend your driver licence.
If you cannot pay your fine within 28 days
Call the Ministry of Justice on 0800 4 FINES.
Dispute a fine
Court fines
You can appeal court-imposed fines within the 28 days before payment is due — your local District Court has a form you can complete to do this.
Find your local District Court
Police or council infringement fees that have become court fines
If your fine has reached the court because you did not pay a Police or council infringement fee, you can only dispute it under certain circumstances.
Dispute an infringement that’s become a fine
Who to contact for more help
If you need more help or have questions about the information or services on this page, contact the following agency.
-
Ministry of Justice
Contact and agency details
Utility links and page information
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