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The Guide for Defendants provides general information about the court process for tickets. This guide is not meant to be used as legal advice. If you have any legal questions, contact a lawyer. If you want to know how your ticket may affect your driver’s safety rating, visit the Manitoba Public Insurance website.
Tickets can be paid online up to and including the final response date indicated on your ticket or the due date indicated on any notice you have received. They are usually processed within 24 hours. For detailed information about the online service, see below.
Frequently Asked Questions. What options do I have when I get a ticket? Can I pay my ticket immediately, or do I have to wait for the response period? Can I have another person appear or act on my behalf? What if the ticket was issued in the name of a company? What if the ticket was issued to me, but I was not driving?
Ticket Information. You will need the following information to pay your fine online. Ticket No. Date of Offence. Original Fine Amount on Ticket. A valid credit card (Visa or MasterCard) Only full payments can be made online.
The Highway Traffic Act – This regulates the licensing of vehicles, classification of traffic offences, and administration of loads, classification of vehicles and other transport related issues. Report a traffic complaint to Winnipeg Police; Pay a ticket; Contest a ticket; Request a parade permit for a special event
1) Go in person to 373 Broadway in Winnipeg or check with a regional court: https://www.gov.mb.ca/justice/tickets/contact.html. 2) Phone the court: 204-945-3156 in Winnipeg or toll free at 1-800-282-8069 (ext.3156). Have the offense / ticket number ready.
Traffic tickets, photo radar offences. Traffic tickets and provincial fines can be paid in many ways: online; in person; by mail – with a cheque or money order payable to the Minister of Finance. Send it to the court address shown on your ticket.