How to Fight a Speed Camera Ticket in Oregon (2026)
Oregon speed camera tickets — intersection speed cameras (ORS 810.437) and photo radar (ORS 810.444) — are full traffic violations. Conviction is reported to ODOT and appears on your driving record (ORS 810.437(7); ORS 810.444(5) — “same penalties and all consequences” as an officer-issued citation). Oregon has no numeric points system, but driving record convictions can affect insurance premiums. Presumptive fines: $165 (11–20 mph over, Class C) up to $440 (31+ mph over, Class A). Strongest defense: if you were not the driver, a Certificate of Innocence results in mandatory dismissal (ORS 810.437(6)(a)). You have 30 days from mailing to respond.
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Key facts — Oregon speed camera tickets:
- Nature: civil violation
- Points on license: No — not reported to BMV
- Insurance impact: IMPORTANT: Oregon has no numeric points system, but camera convictions ARE reported to ODOT and appear on the driving record under ORS 810.436(8), 810.437(7), and 810.444(5), which state that camera violations carry 'the same penalties and all consequences' as officer-issued violations. Convictions can appear on driving records and may affect insurance premiums. This is NOT a no-consequence state. Oregon camera tickets are full traffic violations tried under ORS Chapter 153.
- Fine range: Red-light (ORS 811.265, Class B): $265 presumptive / up to $1,000. Intersection speed 11-20 mph over (Class C): $165 presumptive / up to $500. Intersection speed 21-30 mph over (Class B): $265 presumptive / up to $1,000. Intersection speed 31+ mph over (Class A): $440 presumptive / up to $2,000. Photo radar 11-20 mph over (Class C): $165 presumptive. School zone: doubled presumptive under ORS 153.020.
- Speed camera note: Intersection speed cameras (ORS 810.437) and photo radar (ORS 810.438; ORS 810.444) authorized for cities. Restricted to residential areas, school zones, or areas with governing body safety finding (photo radar). Not authorized on controlled access highways. Work-zone photo radar (ORS 810.442) is out of scope — different officer-operated framework.
Oregon Deadline Alert
Citation must be mailed within 10 business days of the violation (ORS 810.436(1)(d); ORS 810.437(1)(c)). Owner has 30 days from citation mailing to respond (ORS 810.436(1)(e)). Certificate of innocence must be submitted within 30 days of mailing (ORS 810.436(7)(a)).
Contest process: Circuit court, justice court, or municipal court of the county or city where the violation occurred (ORS 153.036(2)). Trial to the court without jury (ORS 153.076(1)). State bears burden of proof by preponderance (ORS 153.076(2)). Pretrial discovery applies (ORS 153.076(3)). Failure to respond can result in default judgment and potential license suspension (ORS 809.220).
Your Defenses in Oregon
Defenses are ranked by strength: high, medium, conditional. Statutory hooks are traceable to primary-source legal research verified 2026-06-08.
Owner Was Not the Driver — Certificate of Innocence (Mandatory Dismissal)
highORS 810.436(7)(a), ORS 810.437(6)(a), and ORS 810.444(3)(a) each provide an identical mandatory-dismissal mechanism. The registered owner may respond by mail within 30 days from the mailing of the citation by submitting (1) a certificate swearing or affirming that the owner was not the driver, and (2) a photocopy of the owner's driver license. Upon receipt, the jurisdiction SHALL dismiss the citation without requiring a court appearance. No identification of the actual driver is required — unlike Maryland and California, Oregon's certificate-of-innocence mechanism requires no driver identification. This is a mandatory dismissal, not discretionary.
ORS 810.436(7)(a) (red-light / intersection camera); ORS 810.437(6)(a) (intersection speed camera); ORS 810.444(3)(a) (photo radar). Source: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/bills_laws/ors/ors810.html. Last verified: 2026-06-08.
Business / Fleet — Vehicle in Custody of Employee or Lessee (Certificate of Nonliability)
highORS 810.436(7)(b), ORS 810.437(6)(b), and ORS 810.444(3)(b) each provide a parallel mandatory-dismissal mechanism for business entities and public agencies. If a business or public agency submits, within 30 days of the citation mailing, a certificate of nonliability stating the vehicle was in the custody and control of an employee, renter, or lessee — and provides the driver license number, name, and address of that person — the citation SHALL be dismissed against the business or agency. Unlike the individual certificate, the business certificate must identify the specific employee/renter/lessee.
ORS 810.436(7)(b) (red-light / intersection camera); ORS 810.437(6)(b) (intersection speed camera); ORS 810.444(3)(b) (photo radar). Source: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/bills_laws/ors/ors810.html. Last verified: 2026-06-08.
Citation Mailed After 10-Business-Day Statutory Deadline
highORS 810.436(1)(d) requires that camera citations 'be mailed to the registered owner of the vehicle, or to the driver if identifiable, within 10 business days of the alleged violation.' ORS 810.437(1)(c) imposes the identical requirement for intersection speed cameras. The 10-business-day requirement is a statutory precondition. Under ORS 153.076(2), the state bears the burden of proving compliance with all statutory requirements by preponderance; a late postmark directly challenges compliance.
ORS 810.436(1)(d) (red-light/intersection camera: 10 business days to mail); ORS 810.437(1)(c) (intersection speed: 10 business days to mail); ORS 153.076(2) (state bears burden of proof). Source: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/bills_laws/ors/ors810.html. Last verified: 2026-06-08.
Plate / Vehicle in Image Does Not Match Owner's Vehicle
highORS 810.436(4), ORS 810.437(3), and ORS 810.444(1)(b) establish only a rebuttable presumption that the registered owner was the driver. If the plate in the enforcement photograph is misread, or the vehicle shown in the photo is a different make, model, or color than the registered owner's vehicle, the presumption is rebutted. Under ORS 153.076(2), the state bears the burden of proof by preponderance; an obviously different plate or vehicle directly challenges the state's case.
ORS 810.436(4) (rebuttable presumption — rebutted by evidence vehicle in image is not owner's); ORS 810.437(3) (same); ORS 810.444(1)(b) (same); ORS 153.076(2) (state bears burden of proof). Source: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/bills_laws/ors/ors810.html. Last verified: 2026-06-08.
Required Camera Warning Signs Missing or Non-Compliant
mediumOregon statutes impose specific signage requirements as preconditions to camera-based enforcement without a police officer: ORS 810.436(1)(a)-(b) requires signs on all major routes entering the jurisdiction and signs before each traffic control device at which a camera is installed. ORS 810.438(2)(d) requires photo radar signs 'Traffic Laws Photo Enforced' between 100-400 yards before the unit. All are statutory preconditions. The state must prove compliance (ORS 153.076(2)).
ORS 810.436(1)(a)-(b) (red-light/intersection speed camera signage); ORS 810.438(2)(d) (photo radar sign placement — 100-400 yards, 2+ feet above ground); ORS 810.437(1)(a)-(b) (intersection speed camera signage); ORS 153.076(2) (state bears burden). Source: https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/bills_laws/ors/ors810.html. Last verified: 2026-06-08.
Oregon Speed Camera Ticket FAQ
Do Oregon speed camera tickets go on my driving record?
Yes. ORS 810.437(7) and ORS 810.444(5) each state that camera violations carry 'the same penalties and all consequences' as officer-issued violations. Conviction is reported to ODOT and appears on your driving record. Oregon has no numeric points system, but driving record convictions can affect insurance premiums. This is why contesting an Oregon camera ticket has higher stakes than in most other camera states.
What is a Certificate of Innocence for Oregon speed camera tickets?
Under ORS 810.437(6)(a) (intersection speed cameras) and ORS 810.444(3)(a) (photo radar), if you were not the driver, you may mail a Certificate of Innocence within 30 days of the citation mailing. It requires a sworn or affirmed statement that you were not the driver plus a photocopy of your Oregon driver license. The jurisdiction SHALL dismiss the citation — no court appearance required, no driver identification needed. This is mandatory, not discretionary.
How long do I have to respond to an Oregon speed camera ticket?
You have 30 days from the date the citation was mailed to respond (ORS 810.437(1)(d)). The citation must have been mailed within 10 business days of the alleged violation (ORS 810.437(1)(c)) — a postmark more than 10 business days after the violation is a procedural defense. If you fail to respond, a default judgment may be entered and your license can be suspended under ORS 809.220.
What are the fine amounts for Oregon speed camera tickets?
Fines depend on speed. Intersection speed cameras: Class C ($165 presumptive, up to $500) for 11–20 mph over; Class B ($265 presumptive, up to $1,000) for 21–30 mph over; Class A ($440 presumptive, up to $2,000) for 31+ mph over. Photo radar: Class C ($165 presumptive). School-zone fines are doubled under ORS 153.020. These are the same fine classes as officer-issued citations.
What is the signage requirement for Oregon photo radar tickets?
Under ORS 810.438(2)(d), a sign announcing 'Traffic Laws Photo Enforced' must be posted between 100 and 400 yards before the photo radar unit, at least 2 feet above ground level. If the sign was missing, outside the required 100–400 yard range, or below 2 feet off the ground, that is a statutory precondition failure. The state bears the burden of proving compliance under ORS 153.076(2).
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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 2026-06-08. Verify current rules with your court or a licensed attorney.