A careless driving ticket is one of the most common — and most misunderstood — moving violations in the country. You can get one for anything a police officer considers a failure to drive with “due caution.” That includes drifting out of your lane, following too closely, rolling through a stop sign, or simply being involved in a fender bender.
Unlike reckless driving, a careless driving ticket does not require the officer to prove you acted intentionally. It only requires that your driving fell below a reasonable standard of care. In most cases, it is treated as a civil infraction or low-level misdemeanor rather than a criminal charge.
What a Careless Driving Ticket Costs
Fines for a careless driving ticket vary widely by state. Some states keep the base fine modest but pile on court costs and surcharges. Others set a higher ceiling, especially if an accident was involved. The table below shows what five states typically charge.
| State | Typical Fine | Points | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| New Jersey | $50 – $200 + $39 court fees | 2 | Fines double in 65 mph zones and construction zones |
| Florida | $100 – $500+ | 3 (4 if crash involved) | Court costs push the total over $500 in some counties |
| Colorado | Up to $300 | 4 | Rises to $300 – $1,000 if bodily injury results |
| Minnesota | Up to $1,000 | No point system | 3 violations in 12 months triggers a 30-day suspension |
| Pennsylvania | Up to $300 | 3 | Up to $500 fine if an unintentional death results |
Your state’s fine may be different. For example, some municipalities tack on additional local surcharges that don’t show up in the statute. Check your state’s traffic ticket guide for the exact number where you live.
Does a Careless Driving Ticket Add Points?
In most states, yes. A careless driving ticket adds points to your driving record. The number ranges from 2 points in New Jersey to 4 points in Colorado. Florida sits in the middle at 3 points, or 4 if the violation involved a crash. Pennsylvania also adds 3 points.
Minnesota is the exception. It does not use a point system at all. Instead, it tracks the number of violations directly. If you receive three moving violations within 12 months, your license gets suspended for 30 days. Four violations in 12 months means a 90-day suspension.
Even in states that use points, a single careless driving ticket is unlikely to trigger a suspension on its own. However, points add up fast when combined with other violations. In New Jersey, for instance, accumulating 6 or more points triggers an annual surcharge of $150 plus $25 per point over six — paid for three consecutive years. That surcharge alone can cost you $450 or more on top of the original fine. As a result, keeping your point total low matters even if you’re nowhere near the suspension threshold.
How a Careless Driving Ticket Affects Your Insurance
This is where a careless driving ticket really hurts. The fine itself might be a few hundred dollars. The insurance increase can cost you ten times that over the next few years. On average, drivers see a rate increase of about 22% after a careless driving conviction. For a driver paying $2,000 a year, that works out to roughly $440 more per year.
Most insurers keep the violation on your rating profile for three to five years. Over that period, the total extra premium typically adds up to $1,200 to $2,000 — far more than the court fine. Younger drivers and those with prior violations tend to see the steepest increases, sometimes approaching 40%.
This is one of the strongest reasons to contest a careless driving ticket or negotiate it down to a lesser charge. For example, in New Jersey, attorneys frequently get careless driving reduced to “unsafe driving” under NJSA 39:4-97.2, which carries zero points. Fewer points means a smaller — or nonexistent — insurance hit. If your insurer never sees the points, your rates may not go up at all.
Can You Fight a Careless Driving Ticket?
Yes, and many drivers do. A careless driving ticket is based on the officer’s judgment that you were not exercising “due care.” That standard is subjective, which gives you room to challenge it. You are not guaranteed to win, but the charge is easier to contest than something objective like running a red light caught on camera.
Common defenses include challenging the officer’s observations. Weather, distance, or obstructed sightlines may have limited what the officer actually saw. Dashcam or bodycam footage can sometimes contradict the written report. You may also be able to argue that an emergency situation — such as swerving to avoid a sudden hazard — forced the driving behavior the officer flagged.
Even if the evidence is strong, many courts and prosecutors allow plea bargains. In practice, a careless driving ticket is often reduced to a lesser violation that carries fewer or zero points. Some jurisdictions also offer dismissal if you complete a defensive driving course. The rules vary by state and even by court, so check with your local traffic court about what options are available to you.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Is a careless driving ticket a criminal offense?
In most states, no. A careless driving ticket is typically a civil traffic infraction or a low-level summary offense. However, in states like Colorado and Minnesota, it can be charged as a misdemeanor — especially if injuries or property damage are involved. A misdemeanor can appear on a criminal background check, so this distinction matters.
What is the difference between careless driving and reckless driving?
The key difference is intent. A careless driving ticket means you were negligent — you made a mistake or lacked attention. Reckless driving means you deliberately ignored the risk. Reckless driving is a criminal charge in most states and carries heavier fines, more points, and possible jail time. In fact, reckless driving charges are frequently plea-bargained down to a careless driving ticket to avoid the criminal record.
Can a careless driving ticket be removed from my record?
It depends on your state. Some states allow point reduction through a defensive driving course. Others let violations drop off your record automatically after a set period, typically three to five years. In a few states, you may be able to petition the court for expungement. Check your state DMV’s website or call your local traffic court for the specific rules that apply to you.
A ticket can raise your insurance for years
See how much a violation affects rates in your state — and compare cheaper options.
Find Your State’s Exact Rules
Fines, points, and the process to fight a ticket all change from state to state. Pick your state to see the exact fine by how fast you were going, the points it adds, and your options to fight it or take traffic school.
Sources & How to Verify
The figures and rules on this page are drawn from official sources. Always confirm the exact amount and procedure with your state DMV or the court listed on your citation.
- NHTSA: nhtsa.gov — national speeding and speed-management data
- GHSA: ghsa.org — state traffic-law summaries and automated-enforcement data
- IIHS: iihs.org — insurance and crash-risk research
- Cornell LII: law.cornell.edu/wex — plain-English legal definitions
- Your state DMV & court: search “[your state] DMV points” and the court named on your ticket for the exact fine schedule
Content last reviewed June 2026. If you notice outdated information, please contact us.
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Informational only. Speeding Ticket Guide is an independent educational resource, not a law firm, and this page does not provide legal advice. Fines, points, and rules are estimates for general guidance and can change — always verify the exact amount and procedure with your state DMV or the court listed on your citation. For advice about your specific situation, consult a licensed traffic attorney in your state.