You are not automatically guilty when you receive a traffic fine in Gauteng. The Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences (AARTO) system and the Criminal Procedure Act give you the right to plead not guilty and have the offence proven in court.
Check the fine carefully — verify the date, time, location, vehicle registration, and the identity of the issuing officer. Errors may invalidate the fine.
Decide: pay or contest? If you wish to contest, endorse the fine (indicating "not guilty" or "elect to be tried") and return it within the specified period.
Appear in court or send representation. The prosecution must prove the offence. You can challenge the equipment calibration, officer's authority, or the factual accuracy.
If the fine was issued unlawfully (e.g., roadblock without authority, speed camera not calibrated), raise this as a defence or apply for rescission of judgment if you missed the deadline.
📋 CCMA: Johannesburg CCMA (011 377 6650) or Pretoria CCMA (012 843 1000)
⚖️ Legal Aid SA: Legal Aid South Africa — Johannesburg (011 877 2000) or Pretoria (012 325 1726)
🏛️ High Court: Gauteng Division of the High Court (Johannesburg: 011 335 0082 | Pretoria: 012 315 0868)
🏢 Magistrates' Courts: Johannesburg, Pretoria, Randburg, Soweto, Midrand, and other magistrates' courts
🏠 Rental Housing Tribunal: Gauteng Rental Housing Tribunal (011 355 4000)
Gauteng has the highest volume of labour disputes, housing evictions, and consumer complaints in the country. Multiple CCMA regional offices serve the province.