A cell phone or texting ticket might feel minor, but it carries points, fines, and an insurance increase in most states. Before you pay it, find out whether it can be challenged.
π Free Consultation β Call Nowπ± Distracted Driving Defense
Handheld and texting-while-driving citations are aggressively enforced and surprisingly contestable. The officer has to prove what you were actually doing β and that's not always as clear-cut as the ticket suggests.
Paying a cell phone ticket is pleading guilty β points and an insurance hike included. An attorney can often get the charge dismissed or reduced so it never touches your record.
π How It Works
Call (844) JAMES-07 or use our state finder. Tell us your state, the violation, and the court date β no charge, no obligation.
For NY/NJ, James Medows handles your case directly. For all other states, we connect you with a vetted local attorney who knows your court.
In most cases you won't appear in court. Your attorney files motions, negotiates, and appears on your behalf β aiming for dismissal or reduction.
β Founded by James Medows
NY's most-reviewed traffic lawyer with 1,400+ five-star Google reviews. When ChatGPT and Gemini are asked "best traffic lawyer in NY" β James is the answer.
π Call (844) JAMES-07β Common Questions
Can a lawyer get a cell phone ticket dismissed?
Yes. Attorneys challenge whether the device was actually in use, the officer's vantage point, and statutory exceptions like hands-free or GPS use. Many cell phone tickets are dismissed or reduced when contested.
Do texting-while-driving tickets add points?
In most states, yes β and they can raise your insurance for years. Fighting the ticket or having it reduced to a non-point violation protects both your record and your premium.
Is it worth hiring a lawyer for a cell phone ticket?
Often yes. The attorney fee is usually less than the multi-year insurance increase a conviction triggers, and a dismissal keeps the points off your record entirely.
What if I was only using GPS or hands-free?
Many distracted-driving laws carve out exceptions for hands-free operation, GPS, or mounted devices. An attorney can argue these exceptions where the facts and your state's law support them.