Upland Traffic Tickets
Upland traffic tickets are processed by the San Bernardino County Superior Court. Located in the southwestern part of the county with about 79,000 residents, Upland generates citations from local police and CHP. All tickets issued in Upland city limits go to the county court for processing. You can search for traffic tickets and handle your case through San Bernardino County portals. Respond to your ticket on time to avoid late fees and DMV license problems. The court offers online and in-person options to help you resolve your case without a lawyer.
Upland Quick Facts
San Bernardino County Traffic Court for Upland
All traffic tickets in Upland go to the San Bernardino County Superior Court. The court has a traffic division that handles citations from across the county. Upland tickets are typically assigned to the Rancho Cucamonga courthouse. Check your citation for the specific court location. You can pay fines, request traffic school, or appear for court at the assigned courthouse.
San Bernardino County court information is at sanbernardino.courts.ca.gov. The site has details on traffic court procedures, locations, and hours. The court offers an online portal at cap.sb-court.org for case searches and payments. Phone support is available at (909) 481-4228 or (760) 241-9529 for 24-hour automated help on your Upland traffic ticket.
| Court | San Bernardino County Superior Court - Traffic Division |
|---|---|
| Address | Check citation for assigned courthouse |
| Phone | (909) 481-4228 or (760) 241-9529 |
| Hours | Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM |
| Website | sanbernardino.courts.ca.gov |
The Rancho Cucamonga courthouse is the closest location for most Upland residents. Parking is available at the courthouse. Bring your photo ID and citation when you visit. Security screens all visitors at the entrance. The traffic clerk window can help you with payments, traffic school requests, or trial information for your Upland ticket.
Note: San Bernardino County traffic school fee is $55 in addition to your base fine.
Upland Police Department Records
The Upland Police Department provides information on police records at uplandca.gov. While this page covers general police records, all traffic court matters go through the San Bernardino County Superior Court. The police department issues citations but cannot handle payments, court dates, or fine amounts. Those are all managed by the county court.
If you have questions about how a ticket was issued, you can contact Upland PD. For questions about your court date, fine amount, traffic school, or payment options, contact the San Bernardino County court directly. The court has final authority on all traffic ticket matters for Upland residents.
Find Your Upland Traffic Ticket Online
San Bernardino County offers an online portal at cap.sb-court.org for traffic ticket searches. Use your citation number to look up your case. The system shows your charge, due date, and fine amount. If your ticket is very new, wait a week or two for it to enter the system. Most citations appear within 10 business days after the officer writes the ticket.
If you cannot find your ticket online, call the court at (909) 481-4228. The automated system is available 24 hours. Staff can also search by your name and date of birth during business hours. Keep your citation number handy for all inquiries about your Upland traffic ticket. The statewide portal at mycitations.courts.ca.gov also works for San Bernardino County tickets once they are loaded.
To search for your Upland traffic ticket, you need:
- Citation number from your ticket
- Your last name as spelled on the citation
- Date of birth for phone inquiries
Pay Your Upland Traffic Ticket
You can pay your Upland traffic ticket online, by mail, or in person. Online payment is available through the San Bernardino court portal at cap.sb-court.org. The system accepts credit cards, debit cards, and e-checks. You get a receipt by email right away. The site is open all day and night. Enter your citation number to start the payment process.
To pay by mail, send a check or money order to the address on your courtesy notice. Write your citation number on the payment. Do not send cash. Your payment must arrive before the due date to avoid late fees. Mail takes time, so send it early. If you want proof of payment, use certified mail with tracking.
In-person payment is accepted at San Bernardino County courthouses. Bring your citation and payment. The clerk takes cash, checks, money orders, and cards. You get a receipt on the spot. If you cannot pay the full amount, ask about a payment plan. The court may approve monthly payments if you qualify. Request a plan before your due date to avoid penalties on your Upland traffic ticket.
Note: Paying your ticket is the same as pleading guilty and the conviction goes on your DMV record.
Traffic School for Upland Tickets
Traffic school can keep your ticket off your insurance record. The conviction still goes on your DMV record, but insurers cannot see it. This helps avoid rate increases. You must meet certain rules to qualify. You need a valid driver license. The ticket must be for one point. You cannot have attended traffic school in the last 18 months. Speeding over 100 mph does not qualify. Commercial drivers cannot use traffic school for tickets in a commercial vehicle.
Request traffic school before your court date or by the deadline on your courtesy notice. You can request it online through the San Bernardino court portal or in person at the clerk window. Once approved, you pay the full fine plus a $55 traffic school fee. The court gives you a deadline to finish the course. Most people do an online course that takes about eight hours. You work at your own pace and take the test when ready.
After you finish, the school sends proof to the court. Make sure this happens before the deadline. If you miss it, your Upland ticket goes on your insurance record anyway. The DMV keeps the ticket on file for three years. Insurance will not see it if you complete traffic school on time. You can only use traffic school once every 18 months in California.
Contest an Upland Traffic Ticket
You can contest any traffic ticket by pleading not guilty. You have two trial options. One is an in-person trial where you appear before a judge. The other is a trial by written declaration where you submit your case on paper and the officer does the same. The judge reads both sides and makes a decision without a hearing. Many people choose the written option to save time and avoid going to court.
To contest your Upland ticket, check the not guilty box on your citation and mail it back. Or submit your plea in person at the clerk window. The court will set a trial date for in-person hearings or send instructions for a written trial. For a written trial, fill out form TR-205 and submit it with bail. Bail is the full fine. If you win, you get it back. If you lose, it pays the fine. The form is at selfhelp.courts.ca.gov.
If you lose a written trial, you can ask for a new trial in person. This is called a trial de novo. It is a fresh start. The judge does not know about the first trial. You present your case again. If you lose the second trial, you have 30 days to file an appeal. Appeals are complex and usually need a lawyer. For most Upland tickets, the written trial is a good first step to fight without hiring help.
California law allows written trials under Vehicle Code § 40902. The statewide portal at mycitations.courts.ca.gov supports written trials for San Bernardino County. The site guides you through the process and lets you upload your statement and evidence.
Traffic Tickets and Your Driving Record
Every traffic conviction in California goes on your driver record at the DMV. This record is public. Insurance companies see it when they check your driving history. Points from tickets can raise your rates or cancel your policy. Too many points can suspend your license. A one-point ticket stays on your record for three years. A two-point violation stays for seven years. DUI stays for ten years.
You can get a copy of your driver record from the DMV. The online version costs $2. Go to dmv.ca.gov to order it. You can print it right away. This record shows all your tickets, accidents, and license actions. If you see a mistake, contact the DMV to fix it. You may need proof from the court if an Upland ticket should have been dismissed.
Insurance companies check your record when you renew or apply. One ticket may not hurt much. Multiple tickets in a short time will raise your rates. Traffic school can hide one ticket every 18 months from insurance. The DMV still sees the ticket and counts the point toward suspension, but insurance cannot access that specific conviction. This helps keep rates down.
Under Vehicle Code § 1808, your driver record is public. Employers and others can request it. The DMV charges $5 for mail requests or $2 online. All reportable violations appear for the retention period set by law.
San Bernardino County Traffic Ticket Records
Upland is in San Bernardino County. All traffic tickets from the city go through the county superior court. The court processes thousands of citations each year from cities and unincorporated areas across the county. For complete information on court locations, online portals, traffic school fees, and payment options, visit the San Bernardino County traffic ticket records page.