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California Traffic Ticket Points: How They Work and How to Avoid Them

Actualizado 1 de marzo de 20263 min de lecturaPuntos DMV

California's DMV uses a point system to track traffic violations on your driving record. Points are assigned when you are convicted of a moving violation, and accumulating too many points can trigger a license suspension or probation. Understanding how points work — and how to avoid them — is essential for every California driver.

Contesting your ticket is the most effective way to avoid a point on your record. Check if my ticket qualifies →

How California DMV Points Are Assigned

Points are added to your California DMV record when you are convicted of a traffic violation. A conviction can come from paying the fine (which counts as a guilty plea), losing at a court hearing, or losing a Trial by Written Declaration. If you successfully contest your ticket, no point is added.

  • 1-point violations: Most common moving violations (speeding, running a stop sign, improper lane change)
  • 2-point violations: More serious violations (reckless driving, DUI, hit and run)
  • 1.5-point violations: Commercial vehicle violations receive 1.5 points
  • Points stay on your record for 36 months (3 years) for most violations
  • DUI and certain serious violations stay on record for 7–10 years

The Negligent Operator Treatment System (NOTS)

California's DMV uses the Negligent Operator Treatment System (NOTS) to identify drivers accumulating too many points. The thresholds are:

  • 4 points in 12 months: Warning letter from DMV
  • 6 points in 24 months: Notice of intent to suspend license
  • 8 points in 36 months: License suspension
  • Commercial drivers: Lower thresholds apply
  • Probationary drivers (first 3 years): Even lower thresholds

Paying the Fine = Guilty Plea

When you pay a California traffic ticket without contesting it, you are entering a guilty plea to the violation. The conviction is recorded on your DMV record and the point is added. You cannot pay the fine and then contest the point separately.

How Points Affect Your Insurance

Insurance companies in California pull your driving record when you apply for insurance and at renewal. A single point can raise your insurance premium by 20–40% depending on your insurer and the violation. Multiple points can make you ineligible for standard insurance and force you into the high-risk pool, which can cost thousands more per year.

How to Avoid Points: Contest Your Ticket

The most effective way to avoid a point is to successfully contest your ticket through Trial by Written Declaration or a court hearing. If the case is dismissed or you are found not guilty, no conviction is recorded and no point is added to your DMV record.

Traffic School as an Alternative

For eligible violations, California drivers can attend traffic school to mask a point from their insurance record. Note that the point still appears on your DMV record — it is only hidden from insurance companies. Traffic school is available once every 18 months for eligible infractions.

  • Traffic school does not remove the point — it masks it from insurance
  • Not available for violations above 25 mph over the speed limit
  • Not available for commercial driver violations
  • Must be court-approved traffic school
  • Point masking does not apply if you accumulate NOTS threshold points

Contest First, Consider Traffic School Second

If you can successfully dismiss your ticket through TBWD, you have a clean record — no point, no traffic school needed. Traffic school should be a fallback, not the first option.

TicketClear prepares your Trial by Written Declaration to help you avoid the point entirely. Start my TBWD →

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Preguntas Frecuentes

Este artículo proporciona información educativa general sobre la ley de tráfico de California. No es asesoramiento legal. Para asesoramiento específico a tu situación, consulta con un abogado con licencia. TicketClear no es un bufete de abogados y no proporciona representación legal. Los resultados varían. Cada citación es única.

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