How to Fight a Speed Camera Ticket in Illinois (2026)
Chicago speed cameras enforce in Children's Safety Zones — areas within 1/8 mile of a school or park — under 625 ILCS 5/11-208.8 and Chicago Municipal Code ch. 9-101. These are civil violations with no points on your license and no report to the Illinois Secretary of State — no insurance channel. Fines are $35 for 6–10 mph over the limit and $100 for 11+ mph over. The city must mail the Notice of Violation within 90 days of the alleged violation or it is void. You then have 21 days to pay or contest before the fine doubles. Contest through the Chicago Department of Administrative Hearings — online, by mail, or in person at no cost.
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Key facts — Illinois speed camera tickets:
- Nature: civil violation
- Points on license: No — not reported to BMV
- Insurance impact: Civil violation — no license points, not reported to the Illinois Secretary of State, no insurance impact.
- Fine range: Red-light $100 (+$100 late). Speed $35 (6-10 mph over) or $100 (11+ mph over).
- Speed camera note: Chicago operates automated speed enforcement in Children's Safety Zones near schools and parks (625 ILCS 5/11-208.8; Chicago Municipal Code ch. 9-101).
Illinois Deadline Alert
The Notice of Violation must be mailed within 30 days of the city identifying the owner and in no event later than 90 days after the violation (625 ILCS 5/11-208.6) — a notice mailed after 90 days is void. You then have 21 days to pay or contest before the fine doubles.
Contest process: Contest through the Chicago Department of Administrative Hearings — online eContest, by mail, or at an in-person/virtual hearing (no fee). Adverse rulings may be appealed to the Circuit Court of Cook County within 35 days.
Your Defenses in Illinois
Defenses are ranked by strength: high, medium, conditional. Statutory hooks are traceable to primary-source legal research verified 2026-06-05.
Vehicle Sold Before the Violation
highThe registered owner is not liable if the vehicle was sold before the violation date. A bill of sale or title transfer document dated before the violation establishes that the vehicle was no longer under your ownership at the time.
625 ILCS 5/11-208.6; Chicago Municipal Code 9-102-020 / 9-101-020
Vehicle or Plates Stolen
highIf the vehicle or its plates were reported stolen to police before the violation date, the registered owner is not liable. A police report predating the violation is required to establish this defense.
625 ILCS 5/11-208.6 (stolen-vehicle defense)
Leased Vehicle — Lessor Not Liable
highIllinois law exempts a vehicle lessor from liability when the vehicle is leased. The lessor must provide the lessee's name and address, after which liability passes to the lessee.
625 ILCS 5/11-208.6 (lessor exemption)
Notice Mailed More Than 90 Days After the Violation
highIllinois law requires the Notice of Violation to be mailed within 30 days of the city identifying the owner and in no event later than 90 days after the violation. A notice mailed after the 90-day cap is void.
625 ILCS 5/11-208.6 (90-day mailing cap)
Officer Already Issued a Ticket for the Same Incident
highA camera citation may be contested as duplicative if a police officer already issued a paper citation for the same incident, as the same violation cannot be prosecuted twice.
Chicago Municipal Code 9-100-060(b)
Facts Inconsistent With the Images (Wrong Plate/Location/Vehicle)
mediumA citation may be contested if the plate number, location, vehicle description, or speed reading in the notice is inconsistent with the photographic or video evidence captured by the enforcement system.
Chicago Municipal Code 9-100-060(b)
Required Camera Signage Missing or Non-Compliant
mediumIllinois law requires posted signage at or approaching camera-enforcement locations. Missing, obscured, or non-compliant signs may support a defense.
625 ILCS 5/11-208.6 (signage requirement)
Determination Not Properly Reviewed (Dual-Reviewer Requirement)
mediumIn cities over 1,000,000 population, Illinois law requires that a camera violation determination be reviewed by a law-enforcement officer or a second independent technician not employed by the same contractor that operates the camera system.
625 ILCS 5/11-208.6 (in cities over 1,000,000, a determination must be reviewed by a law-enforcement officer or a second independent technician)
Illinois Speed Camera Ticket FAQ
Do Chicago speed camera tickets add points to my license?
No. Chicago speed camera citations are civil violations — no license points are assessed and the violation is not reported to the Illinois Secretary of State. There is no insurance channel. Paying or being found liable does not appear on your driving record.
Where do Chicago speed cameras operate and when are they active?
Chicago speed cameras enforce in Children's Safety Zones — areas within 1/8 mile of a school or park — under 625 ILCS 5/11-208.8 and Chicago Municipal Code ch. 9-101. School-zone cameras are active 7am–7pm on school days. Park-zone cameras are active every day from 6am–11pm.
What are the fine amounts for Chicago speed camera tickets?
Fines are $35 for driving 6–10 mph over the posted limit and $100 for 11 mph or more over the limit. If you do not pay or contest within 21 days, the fine doubles. Unpaid fines can result in a vehicle boot or city sticker denial.
What happens if the Chicago speed camera notice was mailed more than 90 days after the violation?
Under 625 ILCS 5/11-208.6 (incorporated into speed enforcement under 625 ILCS 5/11-208.8), the Notice of Violation must be mailed no later than 90 days after the date of the alleged violation. A notice mailed after that deadline is void by statute. Check the postmark date on the envelope — if more than 90 days elapsed since the violation, contest on that ground.
How do I contest a Chicago speed camera ticket?
Contest through the Chicago Department of Administrative Hearings — you can file an eContest online, submit a written response by mail, or attend an in-person or virtual hearing. There is no filing fee. You have 21 days from the Notice of Violation to contest. If the hearing officer rules against you, you may appeal to the Circuit Court of Cook County within 35 days.
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ParkingFight is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Information is for informational purposes only and based on publicly available state statutes and case law as of 2026-06-05. Verify current rules with your court or a licensed attorney.