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Speed Camera Ticket in Oakland? Here Is What to Do.

How the speed camera program works in Oakland

Oakland operates 18 automated speed cameras on High Injury Network corridors under California's AB 645 pilot program, managed by OakDOT with Verra Mobility as the vendor. The program entered a 60-day warning period on January 14, 2026, during which cameras issued warnings rather than enforceable notices. That warning period generated over 140,000 warnings issued to approximately 74,000 unique license plates. Fine-issuing enforcement began March 15, 2026.

When a camera records your vehicle exceeding the posted speed limit, a Notice of Violation is mailed to the registered owner. You respond by mail to the OakDOT Speed Safety Program. The citation is a civil penalty, not a criminal charge, and does not go through the court system.

See also: Alameda County traffic court | AB 645 speed camera program overview | Oakland speed camera warning period data

Fine amounts

Speed over posted limitFine
11 to 15 mph$50 (warning for first offense, $50 for repeat)
16 to 25 mph$100
26 mph or more$200
100 mph or more$500

No DMV points. No mandatory insurance report. Civil penalty only.

Your 30-day deadline

You have 30 days from the mailing date printed on the notice to request an Initial Administrative Review. Missing this deadline generally waives your right to contest the citation. If the initial review is denied, you then have 21 days to request a Formal Administrative Hearing.

Your options

  1. Pay the fine β€” resolves the citation, treated as admission of liability.
  2. Request an Initial Administrative Review β€” submit a written response to the issuing agency within 30 days. TicketClear prepares this document.
  3. Request a Formal Administrative Hearing β€” if the initial review is denied, you have 21 days to escalate. TicketClear prepares this declaration.
  4. Non-Liability Affidavit β€” if you were not the driver, submit an affidavit identifying the actual driver or certifying you do not know who was driving.
  5. Income-based fine reduction β€” drivers below 250% of the federal poverty level qualify for 50% to 80% fine reduction. Documentation required.

How TicketClear helps

TicketClear is a document preparation service. Our technology prepares your Initial Administrative Review response and, if needed, your Administrative Hearing declaration. You answer questions about your citation and what happened. We generate a properly formatted written response. You review, sign, and submit it.

Filed β€” $49.99

Document download. You submit it yourself.

Handled β€” $99.99

We mail your documents to the issuing agency via certified mail.

Check if my citation qualifies β†’

Frequently asked questions

Does this add points to my license?

No. AB 645 citations are civil penalties, not Vehicle Code infractions. No DMV points are assessed and no mandatory report is sent to your insurer.

Will my insurance go up?

Because no DMV points are assessed, there is no standard mechanism for your insurer to learn about the citation from a driving record check. Your policy terms govern what you are required to report directly.

Someone else was driving my car. What do I do?

Submit a Non-Liability Affidavit identifying the actual driver or stating that you cannot identify who was driving. TicketClear prepares this document.

What is the deadline to respond?

30 days from the mailing date on the notice for an Initial Administrative Review. If the review is denied, 21 days to request a Formal Administrative Hearing.

Does TicketClear represent me at the hearing?

No. TicketClear prepares documents only. We are not a law firm and do not provide legal advice or representation.

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