Cleveland camera ticket, but you weren’t driving.
Cleveland’s automated red-light and speed cameras are issued as civil tickets. If you weren’t the driver, Ohio requires a notarized affidavit filed within 30 days.
Does the form work in Cleveland?
Cleveland adjudicates camera citations as civil tickets through the city, with an appeal process and form published by the city. Ohio law requires a notarized affidavit, filed within 30 days, naming the person who was actually operating the vehicle (a separate affidavit covers a stolen vehicle). Because Ohio camera programs are run city-by-city under home rule, confirm Cleveland’s current filing address and deadline on your ticket.
Ohio requires a notarized affidavit, filed within 30 days, naming the person who was actually operating the vehicle — with a separate affidavit available if the vehicle was stolen. Programs are run by individual home-rule cities, so confirm the local process.
Statute: Ohio Rev. Code § 4511.098 · last verified June 2026. Confirm with your court before filing.
How to file in Cleveland
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Make sure it’s true.Someone other than you, or a co-owner, genuinely had the car. The form is sworn, so this part isn’t flexible.
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File before the deadline.Submit by notarized affidavit naming the actual operator, within 30 days of the ticket.
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Let the court decide.They cancel the ticket or set a hearing. Either way it stays civil: no points, no hit to your record.
The court reviews your declaration — usually within a couple of weeks. You’ll get a decision by mail or email: the ticket is canceled, or a hearing is set. Don’t pay the fine while you wait — paying can withdraw the declaration. Heard nothing by the follow-up date? Call the court and confirm they received it.
Cleveland camera tickets: FAQ
If someone else was driving, can I get out of a Cleveland camera ticket?
Yes. Ohio lets the registered owner file a notarized affidavit (Ohio Rev. Code § 4511.098) stating you weren’t the driver, naming the person who actually had the vehicle. A valid one can cancel the ticket. It must be true — it’s sworn under penalty of perjury.
How do I fight a traffic camera ticket in Cleveland?
If someone else was driving, file a notarized affidavit (Ohio Rev. Code § 4511.098) — follow the steps above. If it was you, request a hearing to contest the citation itself. Either way these are civil tickets, so no license points.
What is the notarized affidavit in Ohio?
It’s a sworn statement to the court that the vehicle was in someone else’s control at the time of the camera infraction. File it by notarized affidavit naming the actual operator, within 30 days of the ticket.
Do camera tickets in Cleveland put points on my license?
No. Automated red-light and speed camera citations in Ohio are civil — they don’t add points to your driving record. Don’t pay the fine before filing, though — paying usually withdraws your right to declare.
Do I have to name who was driving in Ohio?
Yes — Ohio’s process requires you to identify the actual driver for liability to transfer to them. (Some states, like Washington and Oregon, don’t require this; Ohio does.)
This is a statement under penalty of perjury. If it was genuinely someone else, use the remedy without hesitation. If it was you, just pay it or ask for a hearing — a false oath is never worth it.
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