Your ticket details
Fight Kit
Fight your ticket
for $49
Everything you need to fight it yourself — no lawyer, no paralegal.
Disclosure request letter
Pre-addressed to your Ontario prosecutor. Cites R. v. Stinchcombe and Charter s. 7.
Defense strategy for your detection method
Weaknesses to look for, with a review checklist.
Cross-examination questions
Exact questions to ask the officer — designed to expose calibration gaps, procedural errors, and identification problems.
Complete courtroom guide
Step-by-step from plea to closing statement. Includes negotiation script, what to bring, and what NOT to say.
Deadline timeline
Personalized deadlines based on your ticket date.
Preview: Disclosure Letter
RE: REQUEST FOR DISCLOSURE Charge: s. ___ — ... Court: ... Dear Prosecutor, Pursuant to R. v. Stinchcombe, [1991] 3 SCR 326, and Section 7 of the Charter, I request...
Full letter includes 13 specific disclosure items + detection-method-specific requests
A speeding ticket in Ontario doesn't just cost the fine. The average Ontario driver pays $1,920/year for car insurance. A single speeding conviction increases that by 15-50% for three years — adding $864 to $2,880 on top of the fine.
Ontario speeding set fines are $2.50/km for 1-19 km/h over, $3.75/km for 20-29, and $6.00/km for 30-49, plus a 25% victim fine surcharge and $5 court costs. At 50+ km/h over, there is no out-of-court set fine under the speeding schedule; stunt-driving charges under HTA 172 are separate and much more serious.
Use the calculator above to see the real cost of your ticket — including the insurance impact most people don't know about.