Speeding by 15–30 km/h in Northern Territory: Demerit Points & Fine (2026-27)
Infringement amount (verified 17 July 2026)
NT Government traffic offences and penalties · 2026-27 scheduleSpeeding is measured as the margin by which a vehicle's speed exceeds the posted limit for the road, and penalties are arranged in bands: the further over the limit, the higher the band and the heavier the consequence. Most jurisdictions increase both the fine and the demerit points as the bands climb, and at the upper end the response can move beyond points to an immediate or automatic loss of licence.
Enforcement comes from a mix of sources. Fixed and mobile speed cameras handle much of the detection and issue notices based on the registered operator of the vehicle, while police using radar or following vehicles can stop a driver at the roadside. Point-to-point cameras measure average speed over a stretch of road rather than at a single spot, which is aimed at sustained speeding rather than a brief lapse.
Penalties escalate with the band because the risk of harm rises sharply the faster a vehicle is travelling, both in the likelihood of a crash and in its severity. Newer and restricted drivers often work to lower points thresholds than fully licensed drivers, so the same offence can carry a driver closer to suspension. The exact bands, points and fines differ by state and territory, which is where the schedules above come in.
All NT speeding penalties
| Offence | Points | Fine |
|---|---|---|
| Speeding by up to 15 km/h | 1 | $150 |
| Speeding by 15–30 km/h | 3 | $300 |
| Speeding by 30–45 km/h | 4 | $600 |
| Speeding by more than 45 km/h | 6 | $1,000 |
Frequently asked questions
- What happens if I'm caught — speeding by 15–30 km/h in NT?
- The standard penalty is 3 demerit points and a $300 fine.
- How close does this put me to suspension in NT?
- 12 or more points within 3 years on an open licence (suspension 3–5 months by tally). This offence adds 3 points to your record.
The same offence in other states
- NSW: Speeding by 10 km/h or less
- NSW: Speeding by 10–20 km/h
- NSW: Speeding by 20–30 km/h
- NSW: Speeding by 30–45 km/h
- NSW: Speeding by more than 45 km/h
- VIC: Speeding by less than 10 km/h
- VIC: Speeding by 10–24 km/h
- VIC: Speeding by 25–29 km/h
- VIC: Speeding by 30–34 km/h
- VIC: Speeding by 35–39 km/h
- VIC: Speeding by 40–44 km/h
- VIC: Speeding by 45 km/h or more
- VIC: Speeding by 20–24 km/h in a 110 km/h zone
- QLD: Speeding by less than 11 km/h
- QLD: Speeding by 11–20 km/h
- QLD: Speeding by 21–30 km/h
- QLD: Speeding by 31–40 km/h
- QLD: Speeding by more than 40 km/h
- WA: Speeding by up to 9 km/h
- WA: Speeding by 10–19 km/h
- WA: Speeding by 20–29 km/h
- WA: Speeding by 30–40 km/h
- WA: Speeding by more than 40 km/h
- SA: Speeding by less than 10 km/h
- SA: Speeding by 10–19 km/h
- SA: Speeding by 20–29 km/h
- SA: Speeding by 30–44 km/h
- SA: Speeding by 45 km/h or more (excessive speed)
- TAS: Speeding by less than 10 km/h
- TAS: Speeding by 10–14 km/h
- TAS: Speeding by 15–22 km/h
- TAS: Speeding by 23–29 km/h
- TAS: Speeding by 30–37 km/h
- TAS: Speeding by 38–44 km/h
- TAS: Speeding by 45 km/h or more
- ACT: Speeding by up to 15 km/h
- ACT: Speeding by 15–30 km/h
- ACT: Speeding by 30–45 km/h
- ACT: Speeding by more than 45 km/h
- All NT offences
Standard first-offence penalty for a full-licence holder unless noted. Information, not legal advice — if your licence is at stake, get legal advice.