Speeding Offence Solicitors: Expert Representation When It Matters Most
For many drivers, a speeding ticket is a nuisance—a £100 fine and 3 points that you accept through the post. But there comes a point where a speeding offence stops being a minor administrative issue and becomes a serious legal threat. Perhaps you were caught doing 96mph on the motorway. Perhaps you already have 9 points on your licence. Perhaps you are a "new driver" within your two-year probationary period.
In these scenarios, the automated system stops. You are not offered a Fixed Penalty. Instead, you receive a Single Justice Procedure Notice or a court summons. You are facing the Magistrates.
This is the moment to instruct speeding offence solicitors. At Motoring Defence, we specialise in taking over when the stakes are high. We understand that while the facts of the speed might be simple, the law surrounding sentencing, mitigation, and procedure is complex. We are the buffer between you and the bench, using our legal expertise to minimise the damage to your licence and your bank balance.
Fixed Penalty vs. Court Summons: Knowing the Difference
The first thing we clarify for clients is why they have been summoned to court. You generally cannot "choose" to go to court just to delay things; you are sent there because the offence is too serious for a fixed penalty.
If you are at the court stage, the fines are income-related (up to 150% of your weekly income), and the Magistrates have the power to disqualify you instantly. This is why you need a solicitor. We cannot change the speed you did, but we can significantly influence the penalty you receive.
The Single Justice Procedure (SJP): The "Hidden" Court
Most speeding cases today start with a Single Justice Procedure Notice. This is a letter asking you to plead guilty or not guilty by post/online. A single magistrate then reviews your case in a closed room, without you present.
This process is dangerous for the unrepresented. It feels like a form-filling exercise, encouraging you to plead guilty quickly. As your speeding offence solicitors, we intervene here.
Saving the "New Driver": The 6-Point Trap
For drivers who passed their test less than two years ago, the New Drivers Act 1995 is brutal. If you accumulate 6 penalty points, your licence is revoked by the DVLA. You must re-apply for a provisional licence and retake both theory and practical tests.
This can happen with just two minor speeding offences (3 points + 3 points) or one moderate offence (6 points). The Solicitor's Strategy: If you are a new driver facing a 6-point offence (e.g., doing 51mph in a 30mph zone), we have a radical strategy. We often argue for a short discretionary disqualification (e.g., 7-14 days) instead of points. It sounds counter-intuitive to ask for a ban. But a ban does not trigger the revocation of your licence under the New Drivers Act. Points do. By taking a short ban, you keep your full licence once the ban ends. Only specialist speeding offence solicitors know how to navigate this loophole effectively.
"Special Reasons": Avoiding Points Entirely
Sometimes, you are technically guilty of speeding, but there was a genuine emergency. This is known as a "Special Reasons" argument. If successful, the court finds you guilty but imposes zero penalty points and zero fine.
Examples of Special Reasons we have argued:
Managing the "Bands": A, B, and C
Magistrates sentence speeding based on "Bands."
If you are on the cusp of two bands (e.g., 41mph in a 30mph zone is Band B, but close to Band A), a solicitor is vital. We argue for the lower band. We highlight your clean driving record, the weather conditions, and the lack of danger to pedestrians to persuade the Magistrates to show leniency. Moving from Band C to Band B can save you hundreds of pounds and save your licence from a ban.
Why Motoring Defence?
We are not just "lawyers"; we are specialist solicitors who understand the mechanics of the traffic court.
Conclusion
When a speeding ticket turns into a court summons, the system is no longer automated. It is adversarial. You need a professional in your corner.
Contact Motoring Defence today. Instruct the speeding offence solicitors who know how to manage the court, mitigate the penalty, and keep you driving.