License Suspensions, Bigger Penalties, New Rules – AARTO explained

Oct 2, 2025

Introduction

From December 1, 2025, South Africa is introducing sweeping changes in how traffic violations are handled under the AARTO (Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences) regime. These reforms will affect everything from how fines are issued to the introduction of a demerit-points system and license enforcement.

 

What Is Changing?


Administrative process replaces criminal courts

Instead of traffic violations being prosecuted in criminal courts, they will now be handled through an administrative adjudication process. This is intended to streamline enforcement and reduce court backlogs.

Infringement notices, not summonses

When you commit a traffic infringement, you’ll get a formal infringement notice. This will include:

The details of the alleged offence

Your personal/vehicle information

The fine amount

Discounted payment terms (if paid early)

Instructions for payment or challenge

Payment options and contesting fines

After receiving an infringement notice, motorists will have several options:

Pay the fine (often with a discount if within a given period)

Request an instalment plan

Challenge or make a representation against the notice

Elect to have the matter heard in court

If someone else was driving, supply their information to transfer liability

 

Non-payment consequences

If a notice is ignored:

A courtesy notice is sent (with added fees)

If still unpaid, an enforcement order may be issued

Renewal of your driver’s licence or vehicle licence disc may be blocked until outstanding fines/fees are settled

Every offense is recorded in a national Contraventions Register, which tracks demerit points and offences tied to your driving record

 

Demerit-points system

One of the major shifts is the introduction of demerit points against your driving record:

Drivers begin with zero points

Different offenses incur different point values, especially for serious violations

If you accumulate more than 15 demerit points, your licence may be suspended for three months for every point over the threshold

A licence will be cancelled entirely after three suspensions

If you go three months without further offences, one demerit point will be subtracted from your record

 

Implementation phases

The first rollout (69 municipalities) begins 1 December 2025, including key metros such as Cape Town, Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban, etc.

The remaining areas follow on 1 April 2026

The demerit system (Sections 24–27) is expected to come into force 1 September 2026 (i.e. later phase)

What This Means for Motorists & the System

Faster adjudication — fewer cases clogging up criminal courts

Greater accountability — since offences stay on your record, there’s stronger incentive to obey road rules

Risk of licence suspension or cancellation — habitual offenders will face more severe consequences

Need for awareness and education — many motorists will be caught unawares if they don’t keep up with changes.

 

This transition represents a major paradigm shift in how traffic offences are handled in South Africa. Whether you’re a daily commuter, long-distance driver, or occasional motorist, the new AARTO system will affect you.

 

Stay informed. Share this with employees, drivers, family and friends. And if you manage a fleet or business vehicles, start preparing your policies now.


Sources we Referenced:

  • The Citizen: “What Polokwane motorists should know ahead of December Aarto rollout”
  • Engineering News: “AARTO rollout in Dec means motorists’ risk new heavy penalties – Fines SA”