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The question every Ontario driver asks after receiving a speeding ticket is: how much will my insurance go up? The answer depends on several factors—but the numbers are often much higher than drivers expect, and the impact lasts much longer than the fine itself.

Insurance Increases by Speed Range and Demerit Classification

Here's what a speeding conviction costs you over three years, based on demerit point classification:



- 0 demerit points (1–15 km/h over): $510–$1,200 over three years (10–20% increase)

- 3 demerit points (16–29 km/h over): $1,785–$4,335 over three years (major conviction for most insurers). This is the most common range for speeding tickets.

- 4 demerit points (30–49 km/h over): $1,785–$4,335 over three years (major conviction for most insurers)

- 6 demerit points (50+ km/h over / stunt driving): $7,650–$9,027+ or policy cancellation (150%+ increase)

- Two minor convictions: $1,070–$1,925 cumulative over three years (21–32% cumulative)



What These Numbers Mean in Real Dollars

If you're paying $2,000 per year for insurance and receive a 3–4 demerit conviction, that's an additional $595–$1,445 per year. Over three years, that's $1,785–$4,335 in extra insurance costs. Over six years (common for serious convictions), that's $3,570–$8,670.

Your $150 speeding fine just became a $1,900+ total cost when you add the insurance impact—and that's before factoring in lost clean-record discounts.

Factors That Affect Your Specific Increase

Insurance companies use multiple factors to calculate your post-conviction rate:



- Your age and driving experience. Younger drivers and those with less experience typically see higher percentage increases because they're already in higher-risk categories. Young drivers paying $4,000–$7,000 annually may see that jump to $5,785–$11,335 after a major conviction.

- Your prior record. A first conviction on an otherwise clean record may have a smaller impact than a second or third conviction. Drivers with existing convictions may see larger increases—or face non-renewal.

- The specific speed of conviction. Insurers distinguish between speeds. Being convicted at 17 over is viewed differently than 28 over, even though both carry 3 demerit points.

- Your insurer's specific policies. Different companies weight convictions differently. Some may be more forgiving of first offenses; others may not.



How Long Does the Increase Last?

Most minor speeding convictions affect your insurance for three years. However, more serious convictions can extend to six years or longer, and some insurers look back even further when assessing new applications.

This extended impact period is why the true cost of a speeding ticket is so much higher than the fine. That three-to-six-year premium increase adds up to thousands of dollars.

The Clean Record Discount Factor

Many drivers don't realize they're currently receiving a "clean record" or "good driver" discount. A speeding conviction doesn't just add to your rate—it can also eliminate this discount, creating a double impact.

Losing a 10–15% good driver discount on top of a 20–25% conviction increase can nearly double your premium. Protecting a clean record discount is often worth more than the cost of fighting a ticket.

Can You Avoid the Insurance Increase?

The only way to completely avoid an insurance increase is to avoid the conviction. This typically means fighting your ticket at trial and achieving dismissal or withdrawal.

Negotiating a reduced speed through early resolution may reduce the increase somewhat, but it doesn't eliminate it. As long as there's a conviction on your record, insurers will see it and rate accordingly.

NextLaw's Sustained Pressure Strategy

Rather than taking the first resolution deal offered early, we opt for trial—not because we want a trial, but because the court rarely does. We request disclosure repeatedly, creating system friction. Pressure accumulates. At the trial date, there's a 5–10% chance the officer doesn't show (immediate win). If the officer does show, we negotiate from a position of strength because the prosecutor wants to clear the case.

No other firm explains a named strategy on the first call.

The 2026 Insurance Reform Context

Ontario's 2026 auto insurance reforms have made insurers significantly more aggressive about rating traffic convictions. The shift toward a "First Payer" model means insurers are now the primary payer in more claim scenarios. Additionally, speeding convictions can impact your eligibility for enhanced Statutory Accident Benefits (SABS) coverage options including Income Replacement Benefits and caregiver benefits worth up to $40,000+.

This means paying a ticket without contesting it doesn't just raise your premiums—it can reduce the coverage available to you when you need it most.

Making the Math Work for Your Decision

When deciding whether to fight your ticket, compare the cost of fighting against the insurance impact of conviction. For most drivers, the math strongly favors fighting—the insurance savings from avoiding conviction typically far exceed the cost of professional representation.

Not every ticket is worth fighting—but every ticket is worth checking. A free call takes 15 minutes and gives you complete clarity on your options and real-world costs.

This article is based on NextLaw's professional analysis of Ontario speeding legal procedures and is provided for informational purposes only. Every case presents unique circumstances, and outcomes depend on specific case facts and proper legal representation. https://www.nextlaw.ca/2026/02/10/insurance-increase-speeding-ticket-ontario/

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