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Totting Up Ban Solicitors for 12 Points and Exceptional Hardship

Facing a totting up ban? Understand how 12 points lead to disqualification and how exceptional hardship arguments can save your licence.

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Totting Up Ban Solicitors for 12 Points and Exceptional Hardship

If you reach 12 or more penalty points, the court may consider a totting up ban. For many drivers, this can mean a minimum 6-month disqualification, which can affect work, business, caring responsibilities, family life and day-to-day independence.

Scarsdale Solicitors advise and represent private clients across England and Wales who are facing totting up disqualification. We can review your driving record, the offence that triggered the points, the evidence and whether an exceptional hardship argument may be available.

If you have received a court summons, Single Justice Procedure Notice or hearing date, get advice before the hearing.

Call 0161 660 6050 or book a confidential consultation with a motoring offence solicitor.

Why clients instruct Scarsdale for totting up cases

  • Private motoring offence representation across England and Wales
  • Advice from an SRA-regulated law firm
  • Over 20 years of experience in criminal defence and motoring law
  • Clear fixed-fee guidance before you instruct us
  • Advice on 12 points, disqualification and exceptional hardship
  • Representation for drivers at risk of losing their licence

Facing 12 points? Get advice before court

A totting up ban can be triggered when a new offence takes your licence to 12 or more penalty points. This often happens after offences such as speeding, driving without insurance, careless driving or using a mobile phone while driving.

If your case is already at court, you should not assume that the ban is automatic in every situation. The court may consider an exceptional hardship argument, but that argument must be prepared properly and supported with evidence.

If your main concern is keeping your licence after reaching 12 points, read our dedicated guide to 12 points no ban and exceptional hardship. This page explains the wider totting-up process and when that argument becomes necessary.

What is a totting up ban?

A totting up ban is a driving disqualification that can be imposed when a driver accumulates 12 or more penalty points within the relevant period.

The totting-up rule is set out in section 35 of the Road Traffic Offenders Act 1988. The court must consider disqualification unless it is satisfied that there are grounds for not doing so, such as exceptional hardship.

The key issue is not just how many points are on your licence today. The court will look at the dates of the offences and whether the points count for totting-up purposes.

How long is a totting up ban?

The usual minimum ban is 6 months for a first totting up disqualification.

The minimum period can be longer if you have had previous disqualifications within the relevant period. The court can also impose a longer ban if it considers that appropriate.

If the court accepts an exceptional hardship argument, it may decide not to disqualify you or may impose a shorter ban. This depends on the evidence and the circumstances.

How are penalty points counted?

Penalty points usually count for totting up based on the date of the offence, not the date of conviction. This matters because a case may be heard months after the offence.

GOV.UK explains penalty points and endorsements, including how endorsements are recorded on a driving record. You can also view your driving licence record on GOV.UK to check the points recorded against your licence.

If you are unsure whether your points count for totting up, get advice before court. A solicitor can check the offence dates, conviction dates, endorsement codes and whether the court is likely to treat the case as a totting-up matter.

Common offences that can lead to a totting up ban

A totting up ban is often caused by a series of lower-level offences rather than one serious incident.

Common examples include:

  • Speeding
  • Driving without insurance
  • Careless driving
  • Using a mobile phone while driving
  • Traffic light offences
  • Failing to furnish driver details
  • Driving otherwise than in accordance with a licence

If you have 9 points and face another offence carrying 3 or more points, you may be at risk of a totting up ban. If your latest offence is a speeding matter, use our speeding fine calculator as a starting point, then get advice if the result could take you to 12 points.

What happens at a totting up hearing?

At a totting up hearing, the court will consider the new offence, your existing points and whether the total reaches 12 or more.

If the court finds that the totting-up provisions apply, it will usually consider disqualification. You may then have the opportunity to put forward an exceptional hardship argument.

The court will expect clear evidence. It is not enough to say that losing your licence would be inconvenient. Most drivers experience inconvenience when banned. Exceptional hardship must go beyond the ordinary consequences of disqualification.

What is exceptional hardship?

Exceptional hardship is an argument asking the court not to impose a totting up ban, or to reduce the impact of disqualification, because the consequences would be unusually severe.

Exceptional hardship may involve the impact on:

  • Your employment
  • Your business
  • Employees who rely on you
  • A dependent family member
  • Children or caring responsibilities
  • Medical treatment or appointments
  • Vulnerable third parties
  • Serious financial commitments

The strongest arguments often focus on the impact on other people, not only the driver. For a fuller breakdown, read our page on exceptional hardship and 12 points.

Evidence needed for exceptional hardship

Exceptional hardship arguments should be supported by evidence. The court may be sceptical if the argument is not properly prepared.

Useful evidence may include:

  • Employer letters
  • Employment contracts
  • Job descriptions
  • Proof that driving is essential
  • Business accounts
  • Employee details
  • Medical letters
  • Care records
  • School or childcare evidence
  • Mortgage or rent evidence
  • Bank statements
  • Evidence that alternatives are not realistic

The evidence should directly support the hardship being argued. A general statement that you need your licence is unlikely to be enough.

Can you use the same exceptional hardship argument twice?

You cannot usually rely on the same exceptional hardship grounds again within the relevant period. If you have already used an exceptional hardship argument, the court will want to know what has changed.

This is why the first argument must be prepared carefully. A weak or incomplete argument can create problems if you face another totting-up risk later.

If you have relied on exceptional hardship before, tell your solicitor immediately so the previous argument can be checked.

What happens if exceptional hardship succeeds?

If the court accepts your exceptional hardship argument, you may keep your licence. The points will normally remain on your record, which means you may still be at immediate risk if you commit another endorseable offence.

This can leave you driving with 12 or more points. Any further points could bring you back to court.

You should treat this as a final warning. The court may be less sympathetic if you appear again with another offence.

What happens if exceptional hardship fails?

If the court rejects your exceptional hardship argument, it will usually impose a totting up ban.

The ban normally starts immediately. You must not drive once disqualified. Driving while disqualified is a separate criminal offence and can lead to more serious consequences.

If your licence is essential for work or family responsibilities, preparation before the hearing is critical.

Can the offence itself be challenged?

Sometimes the offence that triggers the totting up ban can be defended. This depends on the evidence.

For example, a speeding case may involve issues with driver identification, service of the notice, signage or speed evidence. A driving without insurance case may involve policy documents, employer insurance or special reasons. A careless driving allegation may depend on witness evidence, dashcam footage or whether the driving fell below the required standard.

If the triggering offence can be successfully defended, the totting-up issue may fall away.

How Scarsdale Solicitors can help

Scarsdale Solicitors can review your driving record, the triggering offence, the court paperwork and the evidence needed for exceptional hardship.

We can advise whether the offence can be challenged, whether exceptional hardship may be available and what evidence should be gathered before the hearing. Where appropriate, we can represent you at court and put your case clearly to the magistrates.

We can also advise on related motoring issues such as speeding offences, 12 points no ban and driving without insurance.

Why choose Scarsdale Solicitors?

Scarsdale Solicitors is a private law firm representing clients across England and Wales in motoring and criminal defence matters. We provide clear advice, practical case assessment and court representation for drivers facing totting-up disqualification.

We understand that a driving ban can affect your work, business, family and independence. Our role is to help you understand the risk, prepare the evidence and put forward the strongest available case.

Totting Up Ban FAQs

Understanding offences and process helps you make informed decisions about your future.

What is a totting up ban?
A totting up ban is a driving disqualification that can be imposed when a driver reaches 12 or more penalty points within the relevant period.

How long is a totting up ban?
The usual minimum ban is 6 months for a first totting up disqualification. It can be longer if there have been previous disqualifications.

Can I avoid a totting up ban?
You may be able to avoid or reduce a totting up ban if the court accepts an exceptional hardship argument. The argument must be supported by evidence.

Do points count from the offence date or conviction date?
For totting-up purposes, points are usually considered by reference to the offence date. This can matter if the court hearing takes place months later.

What evidence do I need for exceptional hardship?
Evidence may include employer letters, medical letters, business records, financial documents, care evidence and proof that realistic alternatives are not available.

Do I need a solicitor for a totting up hearing?
Legal advice is sensible if you are at risk of losing your licence, need to make an exceptional hardship argument or want to challenge the offence that triggered the points.

 
 

Speak to a totting up ban solicitor today

If you are facing 12 points, a court hearing or a possible totting up ban, contact Scarsdale Solicitors before your hearing.

We can review your points, explain your options and advise on representation.

Call 0161 660 6050 or book a confidential consultation.

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