Haryana Traffic Fines by Violation: What Speeding, Signal-Jumping and Phone Use Actually Cost You

Shree , Last updated: 31 March 2026  
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Haryana's road network includes some of India's busiest national highways, including NH48 connecting Delhi to Gurugram and beyond, and NH44 running through Ambala and Karnal. High-speed travel on these corridors means traffic enforcement is active and camera-based challans are increasingly common. If you drive regularly in or through Haryana, a Haryana traffic challan check is the quickest way to know if any pending fines have been recorded against your vehicle.

Beyond just checking your status, understanding what Haryana's traffic fines actually cost for each type of violation helps you make informed decisions on the road and avoid the violations that carry the most financial and legal weight.

Haryana Traffic Fines by Violation: What Speeding, Signal-Jumping and Phone Use Actually Cost You

Haryana Traffic Fines: Violation by Violation Breakdown

Violation

First Offence Fine (Rs)  (Approx)

Repeat Offence Fine (Rs) (Approx)

Other Consequences

Overspeeding (light vehicle, up to 20 km/h over)

1,000

2,000

Warning recorded

Overspeeding (more than 20 km/h over)

2,000

4,000

Licence suspension possible

Overspeeding (heavy vehicle)

2,000

4,000

Vehicle detained

Red light or signal jumping

1,000 to 5,000

5,000 to 10,000

Repeat: licence suspension

Using mobile phone while driving

5,000

10,000

Licence suspended 3 months on repeat

Driving without seatbelt

1,000

10,000

Recorded against licence

Riding without helmet

1,000 and licence suspended 3 months

10,000

Mandatory for pillion too

Drunk driving (first offence)

10,000 or 6 months jail

15,000 or 2 years jail

Licence cancelled on repeat

Driving without insurance

2,000

4,000

Vehicle impounded

Driving without valid licence

5,000

10,000

Vehicle impounded

Driving without PUC certificate

10,000

10,000

Vehicle cannot be used until renewed

The 3 Violations Haryana Drivers Pay the Most For

1. Overspeeding on National Highways

Haryana's national highway network is heavily monitored. Speed cameras are installed at regular intervals on NH48, NH44 and NH58, among others. The challenge for drivers is that speed limits change frequently across stretches and cameras can be placed just after a limit change. Overspeeding fines in the Rs 1,000 to Rs 4,000 range accumulate quickly for regular highway users who drive slightly above posted limits.

2. Mobile Phone Use While Driving

At Rs 5,000 for a first offence and a 3-month licence suspension for a repeat, mobile phone use is one of the highest-risk violations for Haryana drivers. Enforcement has increased significantly on the Gurugram-Delhi corridor, where camera-based detection of phone use is now operational at multiple points.

3. Driving Without PUC Certificate

With a fine of Rs 10,000, an expired Pollution Under Control certificate is disproportionately expensive relative to the cost of renewing it, which is typically Rs 60 to Rs 100. This violation is particularly common among vehicle owners who drive across state lines and are stopped at Haryana border checkpoints, where PUC checks are routine.

Haryana's Speed Limits by Road Type

Road Type

Cars and Jeeps

Trucks and Buses

Two-Wheelers

National Highways (4-lane)

100 km/h

80 km/h

80 km/h

State Highways

80 km/h

65 km/h

60 km/h

Urban roads

50 km/h

40 km/h

40 km/h

School zones (during hours)

25 km/h

25 km/h

25 km/h

Speed limits are periodically revised. Always check posted signs, particularly on highway stretches that have recently been upgraded or where construction is ongoing.

Camera-Based vs Police-Issued Challans in Haryana

  • Camera challans are sent via SMS to the registered mobile number within 24 to 48 hours of the violation and appear on the Parivahan portal
  • Police-issued challans can be settled on the spot or taken to a designated payment centre
  • Camera challans have a notice period of 60 days before escalation to the court system
  • If your registered mobile number is outdated, you may not receive SMS alerts but challans are still recorded against your registration number

How Unpaid Haryana Challans Affect Vehicle Ownership

Haryana's transport department has integrated challan records with vehicle registration renewals. Pending fines flag during RC renewal at the RTO and must be cleared before the registration can be processed. For commercial vehicle operators, pending challans also affect fitness certificate renewals, which are required annually.

For car sellers in Haryana, particularly those in Gurugram and Faridabad where used car transactions are frequent, buyers routinely check challan status before finalising a purchase. A clean challan record is a small but genuine selling advantage.

The Bottom Line

Haryana's fine structure follows the national Motor Vehicles Act framework, but the state's highway density and camera infrastructure mean violations are caught more consistently than in many other parts of India. Knowing the specific fine amounts for each violation type helps you understand the real cost of non-compliance.

For regular Haryana drivers, a periodic challan status check is one of the simplest ways to stay ahead of surprises at the RTO, at a traffic stop, or when selling your vehicle.


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Shree
(Finance Professional)
Category Miscellaneous   Report

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