Process

How TicketFight Works

TicketFight is designed for eligible California traffic infractions where the court allows Trial by Written Declaration. The workflow keeps the driver focused on facts, deadlines, and the paperwork the court expects.

3
Guided steps
$49
Flat fee
0
Court visits to prepare

Workflow

The defense starts with the citation.

A written declaration is strongest when it is organized around the actual violation, the court deadline, and the conditions at the time of the stop. TicketFight builds the package in that order.

1

Upload or enter your citation

Start with a photo of the ticket or enter the citation details manually. The ticket determines the court, violation code, deadline, and facts that matter.

2

Answer focused defense questions

TicketFight asks about the stop, road conditions, signs, traffic, speed-measurement method, and evidence so the written declaration stays specific to your case.

3

Generate and review the TR-205 package

You receive a Trial by Written Declaration package that you can review, print, sign, and submit to the traffic court with any required bail amount.

What You Receive

A reviewable package, not a black box.

Before you submit anything to the court, you can read the defense statement and confirm the facts are accurate.

TR-205 guidance

The package is built around California's Request for Trial by Written Declaration form.

Case-specific statement

The written defense uses the facts you provide instead of generic boilerplate.

Submission checklist

You see what to review before mailing or filing with the court, including signature and bail requirements.

Important

TicketFight is for eligible traffic infractions.

Some citations require a court appearance or individualized legal advice, especially misdemeanors, DUI-related matters, reckless driving allegations, commercial-driver issues, or cases with injury or accident facts. Those situations should be reviewed by a qualified attorney.

Start The Defense

Start the defense from your ticket details.

Upload the ticket, answer the guided questions, and generate a written declaration package you can review before submission.

Start your defense

References

This page is educational information, not legal advice. Always follow the instructions on your citation and court notice.

  1. California Courts Self-Help Guide - Traffic tickets
  2. California Rules of Court, rule 4.210 - Trial by Written Declaration
  3. California Vehicle Code section 40902