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Florida· Courthouse Directory

Florida Traffic Courts

Florida handles non-criminal traffic citations through the county Clerk of Court. Every clerk below accepts a written Affidavit of Defense under Florida Rule of Traffic Court 6.340 — you file a sworn, notarized affidavit with a bond, in lieu of appearing in person, and the hearing officer rules on your case in writing.

Courthouses
21
Counties covered
21 of 21
Response window
5 biz days
Before the hearing
How the Florida Affidavit of Defense works

Florida Rule of Traffic Court 6.340 lets you file a sworn, notarized “Affidavit of Defense or Admission and Waiver of Appearance” with the Clerk of Court in the county where you received the citation. Most clerks also require a bond \u2014 Miami-Dade collects the full civil penalty plus a clerk fee, the 17th Circuit (Broward) uses a flat $75, others vary. The packet must reach the clerk at least 5 business days before your scheduled hearing. You can attach photos, diagrams, and witness statements; the hearing officer reviews them alongside the officer’s report and rules in writing.

Miami-Dade County

County overview →

Broward County

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Palm Beach County

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Hillsborough County

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Orange County

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Pinellas County

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Brevard County

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Volusia County

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Seminole County

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Sarasota County

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Manatee County

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Collier County

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Marion County

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Escambia County

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Alachua County

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Not sure which courthouse handles your case?

Upload your citation and we’ll read the courthouse, case number, and violations straight off the ticket.

Not legal advice. Courthouse addresses, hours, and filing procedures change without notice. Verify with the official Florida court website before mailing or appearing.