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outh Africans face a crackdown as unpaid fines now blocking licences, triggering summonses, and wrecking holiday travel plans
GUEST - Barry Berman, CEO of Fines SA
GUEST - Barry Berman, CEO of Fines SA
As South Africa moves toward the full national rollout of the AARTO Act in mid-2026, motorists are already feeling the consequences of unpaid fines long before the demerit system officially goes live. Across the country, drivers are encountering blocked licence renewals, surprise summonses, ballooning penalties, and even flagged vehicles at roadblocks as enforcement shifts into a more automated, integrated phase.
Although AARTO is not yet fully implemented, the Road Traffic Infringement Agency (RTIA) and multiple municipal systems have begun synchronising data, meaning that outstanding fines are no longer invisible or contained within local jurisdictions. Enforcement is becoming real-time, consistent, and far less forgiving.
According to RTIA data, more than 32 million fines remain outstanding nationwide, and system integrations already underway are exposing these backlogs during routine NaTIS transactions and holiday enforcement operations. Kaya FM
…
continue reading
GUEST - Barry Berman, CEO of Fines SA
GUEST - Barry Berman, CEO of Fines SA
As South Africa moves toward the full national rollout of the AARTO Act in mid-2026, motorists are already feeling the consequences of unpaid fines long before the demerit system officially goes live. Across the country, drivers are encountering blocked licence renewals, surprise summonses, ballooning penalties, and even flagged vehicles at roadblocks as enforcement shifts into a more automated, integrated phase.
Although AARTO is not yet fully implemented, the Road Traffic Infringement Agency (RTIA) and multiple municipal systems have begun synchronising data, meaning that outstanding fines are no longer invisible or contained within local jurisdictions. Enforcement is becoming real-time, consistent, and far less forgiving.
According to RTIA data, more than 32 million fines remain outstanding nationwide, and system integrations already underway are exposing these backlogs during routine NaTIS transactions and holiday enforcement operations. Kaya FM
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