Fight Your Palmdale Traffic Ticket

Got cited on CA-14 through Palmdale — where CHP Antelope Valley Area runs enforcement between the Rosamond Dry Lake and the San Fernando Valley grade? Pulled over on Palmdale Boulevard, 47th Street East, or Sierra Highway — LASD Palmdale's most-cited corridors near the Palmdale Transportation Center and the aerospace industrial district? The CA-14/Palmdale Boulevard interchange and Avenue Q near 10th Street West see consistent speed enforcement.

Contest remotely — no lawyer, no court appearance, no rate hike.

Fight My Ticket — $89 Money-back if your ticket isn't dismissed or reduced.
$490+ Avg. ticket total with assessments
36 mo How long a point stays on your record
$89 Flat fee — no hidden costs

How It Works

1

Submit your ticket info

Enter your citation details on our secure intake page. Takes under 5 minutes.

2

We prepare your declaration

We draft a Trial by Written Declaration tailored to your citation and Palmdale court.

3

We file — you stay home

We handle filing and delivery. No court appearance required at any point.

Courts We Serve in Palmdale

Los Angeles County Superior Court accepts written defense filings for all traffic infractions — an effective way to fight your Palmdale ticket entirely in writing.

  • Los Angeles County Superior Court — Michael D. Antonovich Antelope Valley Courthouse (42011 4th St. West, Lancaster, CA 93534)

Palmdale traffic tickets typically start at a $238 base fine but reach $490–$1,000+ after California's mandatory penalty assessments. A moving violation adds 1 DMV point that stays on your record for 36 months — enough to raise your insurance premium at renewal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Palmdale does not have a city police department. The City of Palmdale contracts all law enforcement from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. Your moving violation citation will show LASD as the issuing agency and the deputy's badge number. The LASD Palmdale Station is at 750 East Avenue Q, Palmdale (non-emergency: (661) 272-2400). All traffic tickets — whether issued by LASD on city streets or CHP on SR-14 — go to the Michael D. Antonovich Antelope Valley Courthouse at 42011 4th St. West in Lancaster.
No. Palmdale's cameras are license plate readers (LPR), not speed cameras. In July 2023 Palmdale contracted with Flock Safety to install 50 LPR cameras throughout the city ($157,000/year); the city expanded to 75 cameras by late 2024. LPR cameras read and log plate numbers and flag stolen vehicles or crime-related cars in near real-time — they cannot issue a speeding ticket. California's automated speed camera pilot program (AB 645, 2023) is limited to Los Angeles, Long Beach, Glendale, San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose. Palmdale is not included.
Yes, completely separate. Palmdale parking citations go through a city-run administrative process, not traffic court. You have 21 days from the citation date (or 14 days from the first overdue notice) to request an initial administrative review — by phone (866-420-2894), online, in person at 38250 Sierra Highway 2nd Floor, or by mail to Parking Citation Service Center, P.O. Box 11923, Santa Ana, CA 92711. If that review upholds the fine, you can request a formal hearing (all fines must be paid first, though a fee waiver is available). A final civil appeal goes to Stanley Mosk Courthouse in Los Angeles, not the Antelope Valley Courthouse.
Correct. The California Highway Patrol Antelope Valley Area (2041 W. Avenue I, Lancaster, (661) 743-6060) handles all enforcement on SR-14 through Palmdale. LASD Palmdale Station only has jurisdiction on city surface streets — Palmdale Blvd, Avenue Q, Sierra Highway within city limits, and surrounding unincorporated communities. Both CHP and LASD citations route to the same Antelope Valley Courthouse at 42011 4th St. West, Lancaster.
Yes. LASD Palmdale Station documented a 2019 license plate enforcement operation on 47th Street East / Avenue S that resulted in 108 citations, 28 towed vehicles, and multiple warrant arrests. 47th Street East remains within the LASD Palmdale Station patrol grid as a documented enforcement corridor. The Antelope Valley Traffic Task Force (AVTTF), launched in 2021 as a joint LASD/CHP operation, continues mobile speed enforcement throughout the Antelope Valley with no fixed schedule published.

Also Serving Cities in Los Angeles County

We also help drivers fight traffic tickets in these nearby Los Angeles County cities.

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