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Florida's roads carry over 17 million licensed drivers, millions of tourists, and some of the most aggressive enforcement in the country. Whether you're merging onto I-95 in Miami or cruising through a school zone in Jacksonville, the chances of getting pulled over are higher here than in most states. Here are the 10 violations that land Florida drivers in trouble most often, what each one will cost you, and what you can do about it.
Before diving into the list, it helps to understand what's at stake. Every moving violation conviction in Florida adds points to your driving record. Those points stay on your record for three years, and if you accumulate too many too fast, the consequences escalate quickly:
| Points Accumulated | Timeframe | Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| 12 points | Within 12 months | 30-day license suspension |
| 18 points | Within 18 months | 3-month license suspension |
| 24 points | Within 36 months | 1-year license suspension |
This is why traffic school matters. Electing the 4-hour BDI course within 30 days of a citation keeps the points from being assessed in the first place. Without traffic school, even two moderate violations in a year can put you dangerously close to suspension territory. Need a deeper dive on how the point system works? We've got you covered.
By far the most common citation in Florida. Speeding tickets have surged significantly in recent years, with enforcement increasing across both urban corridors and rural highways. Duval County (Jacksonville) leads the state per capita in speeding citations, but Miami-Dade, Broward, and Hillsborough counties all generate high volumes as well. The points and fines depend on how far over the limit you were driving:
| Speed Over Limit | Points | Approximate Fine Range |
|---|---|---|
| 1-15 mph over | 3 points | $129 - $179 |
| 16-29 mph over | 4 points | $204 - $354 |
| 30+ mph over | 4 points (mandatory court appearance) | $354 - $500+ |
Speed cameras in school zones are expanding across Florida, adding automated enforcement to traditional patrol-based ticketing. These cameras operate during posted school zone hours and generate citations by mail, complete with photographic evidence. If you're clocked at 30 mph or more over the posted limit, you cannot elect traffic school and must appear in court. Fines in construction zones and school zones are also doubled, making what seems like a minor speed infraction significantly more expensive.
One thing many drivers don't realize: the fine amount on your citation is just the beginning. Without traffic school, the 3-4 points added to your record can trigger insurance rate increases of 20% or more that persist for three years. On a typical Florida premium, that turns a $150 speeding ticket into a $2,000+ financial hit when you factor in the insurance impact.
Got cited for speeding? If it's 29 mph or less over the limit, you may be eligible to address it with a BDI course.
Red light camera programs remain active across Florida, generating hundreds of thousands of citations per year. Whether you're caught by a camera or by an officer, the violation carries 4 points and a base fine starting around $158 for camera-issued citations and higher for officer-issued tickets. A common misconception is that camera tickets don't affect your record. In Florida, a red light camera citation is a Uniform Traffic Citation, and it does go on your record if not addressed properly.
Red light cameras are a particular source of frustration for Florida drivers because the yellow light timing can feel impossibly short at some intersections, especially when you're driving at highway speeds approaching a signal. If you believe the camera citation was issued in error (for example, if you were already in the intersection when the light turned red), you have the right to contest it. However, the contest process requires a court appearance and the outcome is not guaranteed. For most drivers, electing traffic school is the more reliable path to protecting your record.
Got cited? For most red light violations, you can elect traffic school to prevent the points from hitting your record.
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This is the most common criminal traffic offense in Florida, with nearly 100,000 citations per year. Many drivers don't even realize their license has been suspended until they're pulled over for something else. Common reasons for suspension include unpaid traffic tickets, failure to maintain insurance, failure to appear in court, and accumulation of too many points. A first offense for driving on a suspended license is a second-degree misdemeanor, carrying potential penalties including up to 60 days in jail, additional license suspension of up to six months, fines up to $500, and vehicle impoundment.
Repeat offenses escalate quickly. A second offense within five years is a first-degree misdemeanor (up to one year in jail), and a third offense can be charged as a third-degree felony. If your license was suspended for DUI-related reasons, the penalties are even more severe.
Because this is a criminal violation, it is not eligible for traffic school. If you're facing this charge, consult with a legal professional. And if you're unsure about the status of your license, you can check online through the Florida FLHSMV website before you get behind the wheel.
Improper lane change citations have increased sharply across Florida. The violation covers cutting off other drivers, failing to signal (Florida law requires signaling at least 100 feet before any lane change), and unsafe merging. It carries 3 points and fines that vary by county. This violation is especially common on Florida's congested interstates, where aggressive merging is an everyday occurrence.
Got cited? This is a non-criminal moving violation. You may be eligible to elect traffic school and take the 4-hour BDI course to help keep it off your record.
Carrying 3 points, failure to yield is especially common at intersections and pedestrian crossings. Florida consistently ranks among the most dangerous states for pedestrians, and failure to yield is a major contributor. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has highlighted Florida as one of the states with the highest pedestrian fatality rates, and enforcement of right-of-way violations is a priority for many Florida law enforcement agencies.
Got cited? You may be eligible to elect traffic school to help resolve this violation and protect your record.
Texting while driving is a primary offense in Florida, meaning officers can pull you over for it alone without needing another reason to initiate a traffic stop. The penalties escalate with repeat offenses:
Florida's texting law covers any manual use of a wireless device for texting, emailing, or instant messaging while the vehicle is in motion. Voice-activated features are generally exempt. If you get a first offense, some counties allow you to take a wireless communications device safety course to avoid the fine entirely. Want the full details? Our new driver resources cover Florida's distracted driving rules.
Tailgating carries 3 points and is one of the more subjectively enforced violations in Florida. There's no specific distance requirement in the statute. Instead, enforcement is based on the officer's judgment of whether the following distance was reasonable and prudent given the conditions. Florida's sudden, intense rainstorms make tailgating particularly dangerous, and many rear-end crashes during heavy rain start with following distances that would have been marginal even in dry conditions.
Got cited? Non-criminal violation. Traffic school is an option.
School bus violation citations have surged dramatically in Florida, driven in large part by the expansion of school zone cameras across the state. The violation carries 4 points and a fine starting at $265 or more. The rule is strict: on roads without a raised median, all traffic in both directions must stop when a school bus displays its stop signal. Only a raised physical median (not a painted center line) exempts the opposing direction of traffic.
Got cited? You may be able to elect traffic school depending on the circumstances. Check with your county clerk.
Florida processes roughly 44,000 DUI arrests per year statewide, with Hillsborough County (Tampa) consistently among the highest per capita. DUI is a criminal offense with mandatory minimum penalties that escalate significantly with each subsequent offense:
The blood alcohol content (BAC) limit is 0.08% for drivers 21 and older, and 0.02% for drivers under 21 under Florida's Zero Tolerance law. Refusing a breathalyzer test triggers an automatic license suspension of one year for a first refusal and 18 months for a second refusal, regardless of whether you're ultimately convicted of DUI.
DUI is not eligible for traffic school. Penalties are severe and the consequences extend far beyond the legal system, affecting your employment, insurance (expect rate increases of 50-100% or more), and personal record for years. If you're facing a DUI charge, seek legal counsel immediately.
Florida's Move Over law was significantly expanded to cover any vehicle parked on the side of the road with hazard lights flashing, emergency flares, or visible emergency signage, according to the Florida FLHSMV. Previously, the law only applied to emergency vehicles, tow trucks, and utility vehicles. Now, a family with a flat tire on the shoulder receives the same legal protection as a state trooper conducting a traffic stop.
When you approach any stopped vehicle with hazards on, you must move over one lane if safe. If you can't move over (such as on a two-lane road), you must slow down to at least 20 mph below the posted speed limit. Violations carry a $500+ fine and 3 points. Recent state data shows over 200 crashes and more than 17,500 citations per year for Move Over law violations in Florida. Drivers aged 20-29 are statistically the most likely to violate this law.
This is one of the most commonly misunderstood traffic laws in Florida, and the expansion means far more situations now trigger the requirement. The FLHSMV reports that drivers aged 20-29 are the demographic most likely to violate the Move Over law, which is why the state now includes Move Over questions on the driver license exam and prominently features the law in the official driver handbook. Learn the rule now so you don't learn it from a citation.
Got cited? Move Over violations are non-criminal and typically eligible for traffic school. Given the $500+ fine, it's especially worth protecting your record on this one.
Florida's traffic enforcement is aggressive compared to most states, but the state also gives drivers more tools to recover from a citation. The 4-hour BDI course is shorter than what many states require for traffic school. New York's point reduction course is 6 hours. Texas defensive driving is 6 hours. California traffic school varies but is typically 8 hours. Florida's statutory insurance rate protection (FL 626.9541) is also more explicitly protective than what most states offer. However, Florida's point thresholds for license suspension are lower than some states. At 12 points in 12 months triggering a suspension, Florida gives you less room for error than states like California (which uses a 4-point threshold over 12 months but counts points differently) or Texas (which doesn't suspend until you accumulate significant violations). The takeaway: Florida's traffic enforcement is serious, but the recovery options are strong if you act within the 30-day window.
| Violation | Points | Fine Range | Criminal? | Traffic School Eligible? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Speeding (1-15 over) | 3 | $129 - $179 | No | Yes |
| Speeding (16-29 over) | 4 | $204 - $354 | No | Yes |
| Speeding (30+ over) | 4 | $354 - $500+ | No (but mandatory court) | No |
| Running a Red Light | 4 | $158 - $300+ | No | Yes |
| Suspended/Revoked License | Varies | Varies | Yes | No |
| Improper Lane Change | 3 | $129 - $179 | No | Yes |
| Failure to Yield | 3 | $129 - $179 | No | Yes |
| Texting While Driving (2nd) | 3 | $60+ | No | Varies |
| Tailgating | 3 | $129 - $179 | No | Yes |
| Passing Stopped School Bus | 4 | $265+ | No | Yes (typically) |
| DUI | N/A | $500 - $5,000+ | Yes | No |
| Move Over Law | 3 | $500+ | No | Yes |
For most non-criminal violations on this list, the path forward is straightforward: elect traffic school within 30 days, complete the 4-hour BDI course, and aim to keep zero points on your record. Under FL Statute 626.9541, your insurer generally cannot raise your rate when adjudication is withheld and no points are assessed (assuming no at-fault crash was involved). Your Safe Driver status stays intact, and you move forward with a cleaner record. It takes about four hours and can be done entirely from your phone.
The Florida 4-hour BDI course from I Drive Safely is state-authorized by the FLHSMV, accepted in all 67 Florida counties, and designed to be fast and painless. Whether you were caught doing 12 over on the Turnpike or didn't notice the school bus stop sign until it was too late, we may be able to help you protect your record.

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