South Africa’s new traffic fine system is facing fresh scrutiny over how notices will reach motorists.
The South African Post Office has confirmed that it will use e-registered mail to distribute legally served Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences notices, known as AARTO notices.
According to the Post Office, the system will use electronic channels, including SMS and email, to send secure notices to motorists. It said this should improve speed, efficiency and traceability.
AARTO Rollout has Officially Started
The AARTO system was rolled out to 62 municipalities across South Africa on 1 July 2026. President Cyril Ramaphosa signed off the rollout on 29 June 2026.
Before that proclamation, the electronic issuing of AARTO notices had not yet been approved. The proclamation activated Section 30 of the AARTO Act, which deals with the electronic distribution of notices.
This means motorists may now receive legally served traffic fine notices through digital channels, instead of only relying on physical registered mail.
OUTA Warns of Possible Weak Points
The Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse has raised concerns about the role of the Post Office in the new system.
OUTA executive director Adv Stefanie Fick said the organisation remains worried about AARTO’s implementation, including the serving of notices, given the current state of the South African Post Office.
Fick said digital notices may reduce the problems linked to physical registered mail, but they do not remove broader concerns.
These include reliability, legal compliance, proof of service, data accuracy and access for motorists who do not use or regularly check digital channels.
OUTA also raised concerns about whether motorists will still be properly protected when they need to respond within set time periods.
SALGA Also Challenged the Rollout
The South African Local Government Association also raised concerns before the rollout.
SALGA filed an urgent application in the Pretoria High Court to stop the 1 July 2026 rollout, citing concerns over the financial model behind the system. The court dismissed the application due to a lack of urgency.
SALGA said the decision did not deal with the merits of the case and that its legal team was preparing to take the matter further.
AARTO was first introduced in 1998, with parts implemented in Johannesburg and Pretoria from 2008. It is now expanding beyond Johannesburg and Tshwane for the first time.
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