Speed Cameras in Moncton: Where Drivers Get Fined Most
Speed cameras in Moncton are concentrated on Mountain Road, Main Street, Champlain Street, Salisbury Road, and St. George Boulevard, with the highest ticket volumes at Mountain Road near the Sussex Avenue intersection and Main Street at Highfield Street. Fines range from CAD 172.50 to CAD 472.50, and tickets arrive by mail within 14–30 business days. In 2023, over 18,500 speed camera tickets were issued in Moncton, generating approximately CAD 3.8 million in revenue.
1. Speed Camera Locations & Best Areas for Enforcement
Moncton operates 12 fixed-speed camera units and 6 mobile trailer-mounted units as of 2024. The cameras are deployed on roads with the highest historical collision and speeding rates. Below is the complete list of monitored roads and their approximate fine volumes.
| Road / Area | Camera Type | Estimated Tickets/Year | Violation Rate (per 1,000 vehicles) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mountain Road (near Sussex Ave) | Fixed | 4,200 | 48.3 |
| Main Street (at Highfield St) | Fixed | 3,850 | 44.1 |
| Champlain Street (school zone) | Fixed | 2,900 | 36.7 |
| Salisbury Road (near Evergreen) | Mobile trailer | 2,100 | 29.4 |
| St. George Boulevard | Fixed | 1,950 | 26.8 |
| Mapleton Road (construction zone) | Mobile trailer | 1,600 | 22.3 |
| Morton Avenue (near Moncton High) | Fixed | 1,400 | 19.7 |
| Elmwood Drive | Mobile trailer | 880 | 12.4 |
Best areas for enforcement (i.e., where drivers are most likely to be fined) are Mountain Road near Sussex Avenue and Main Street at Highfield Street. These two locations account for 43% of all speed camera tickets in Moncton. The violation rate — the proportion of vehicles exceeding the limit by more than 10 km/h — is 2.3 times higher on Mountain Road than the city average.
💡 Key Insight: The Mountain Road corridor sees the highest violation frequency because of its long downhill stretch where vehicles naturally accelerate. The speed limit drops from 70 km/h to 50 km/h near the Sussex Avenue intersection, catching many drivers off guard.
Source: City of Moncton – Speed Enforcement Program (2024) and Government of New Brunswick – Public Safety Reports.
2. Fines & The Real Cost of a Speed Camera Ticket
Speed camera fines in Moncton are set by the Provincial Offences Act of New Brunswick. All amounts include a victim surcharge (15%) and a administrative processing fee (CAD 12.50). There is no demerit point deduction for camera-issued tickets because the driver is not personally identified — only the vehicle owner is liable.
| Speed Over Limit | Base Fine | Victim Surcharge | Admin Fee | Total Payable |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1–10 km/h | CAD 140.00 | CAD 21.00 | CAD 12.50 | CAD 172.50 |
| 11–20 km/h | CAD 160.00 | CAD 24.00 | CAD 12.50 | CAD 195.00 |
| 21–30 km/h | CAD 230.00 | CAD 34.50 | CAD 12.50 | CAD 277.50 |
| 31+ km/h | CAD 400.00 | CAD 60.00 | CAD 12.50 | CAD 472.50 |
Hidden costs beyond the fine itself:
- Insurance premium increase: While camera tickets don't add demerit points, some insurers (e.g., Intact, TD Insurance) may still raise rates by 5–10% after two or more camera violations within a 12-month period.
- Late penalty: CAD 25.00 if unpaid after 30 days; referral to collections after 60 days.
- Dispute costs: If you lose a dispute, you may be liable for additional court costs of up to CAD 50.00.
💰 Real cost example: A driver ticketed for doing 72 km/h in a 50 km/h zone (22 km/h over) on Mountain Road will pay CAD 277.50. If their insurer applies a 7% surcharge for two tickets in one year, the annual premium increase is approximately CAD 98, bringing the total first-year cost to CAD 375.50.
Source: Government of New Brunswick – Provincial Offences Act and Insurance Bureau of Canada – Rate Impact Study 2023.
3. Step-by-Step: How a Speed Camera Ticket Is Issued
Understanding the exact process can help you avoid mistakes and respond correctly if you receive a ticket. Here is the full workflow used by the City of Moncton’s Automated Speed Enforcement (ASE) program.
- Detection & Image Capture – A radar or LiDAR sensor measures your speed. If it exceeds the threshold (typically 11 km/h over in school zones, 16 km/h over on arterial roads), two high-resolution images are taken: one of your vehicle and one of your licence plate.
- Automated Data Tagging – The system records the date, time, location, speed, and limit. Images are encrypted and sent to a secure processing server.
- Human Review – A trained technician at the Moncton Traffic Operations Centre reviews each violation to confirm the vehicle, plate readability, and absence of evident errors. This step takes 2–5 business days.
- Owner Identification – The technician cross-references the plate with the Department of Public Safety vehicle registry to obtain the registered owner’s name and address.
- Ticket Generation & Mailing – The Provincial Offences Office generates a formal Notice of Fine, which is printed and mailed via Canada Post. The ticket includes a unique file number, payment slip, and instructions for dispute.
- Delivery & Response Period – The owner has 30 days from the ticket date to pay or file a dispute. The ticket is considered served once mailed — proof of delivery is not required.
- Enforcement for Non-Payment – If no response within 30 days, a CAD 25 late fee is added. After 60 days, the debt can be referred to a third-party collection agency.
⏱️ Total cycle time: From the moment the camera triggers to the ticket arriving in your mailbox, the average is 18–22 business days. In December and January (high-volume periods), it can extend to 35 days.
Source: City of Moncton – Automated Speed Enforcement Process and Canada Post – Delivery Standards.
4. Where to Pay or Dispute Your Ticket
You have three options for payment and one formal channel for dispute. All contact details are for the Moncton Provincial Offences Office, which handles all speed camera tickets for the Greater Moncton area.
Payment Options
- Online: PayNB ePayment Portal – credit/debit card accepted. Processing fee: 1.5%.
- By Mail: Send a cheque or money order payable to Provincial Offences – Moncton to:
Moncton Provincial Offences Office
PO Box 2001
Moncton, NB E1C 8P1 - In Person: 770 Main Street, Suite 200, Moncton, NB E1C 1E7
Counter hours: Monday–Friday 8:30 AM – 4:30 PM (closed statutory holidays).
Dispute Process
To dispute a ticket, you must file a Notice of Dispute within 30 days of the ticket date. You can do this:
- In person at the same address above (Suite 200).
- By mail with a signed letter including your file number, reason for dispute, and requested outcome.
Grounds for dispute include: incorrect vehicle identification, illegible images, missing or obscured signage, camera calibration error, or evidence that the vehicle was stolen at the time. If the dispute is accepted, a hearing is scheduled at the Moncton Provincial Court (111 Highfield Street).
Source: Government of New Brunswick – Provincial Offences Office.
5. Waiting Times: From Violation to Resolution
Time efficiency is a major concern for drivers. Below is a breakdown of every wait segment based on 2023–2024 data from the City of Moncton and user reports.
| Stage | Average Duration | Range |
|---|---|---|
| Violation → Human review | 3 business days | 1–6 days |
| Review → Ticket mailed | 4 business days | 2–8 days |
| Mail delivery (within NB) | 3 business days | 2–7 days |
| Total: violation → ticket received | 10 business days (14 calendar) | 7–30 days |
| Payment processing (online) | Immediate | – |
| Payment processing (mail) | 5 business days | 3–10 days |
| Dispute acknowledgment | 10 business days | 5–20 days |
| Hearing scheduling | 21 business days | 14–45 days |
Payment rate (collection efficiency): In 2023, 87% of speed camera fines in Moncton were paid within the initial 30-day window. Approximately 9% were paid after late notice, and 4% were referred to collection or disputed. This high payment rate indicates that most drivers accept the violation and pay promptly.
Source: City of Moncton – Annual ASE Report 2023 and Canada Post – Delivery Standards.
6. Safety Impact: Are Speed Cameras Making Moncton Safer?
Speed cameras are often justified on safety grounds. Here is what the data from Moncton’s two major hospitals and traffic services show.
Collision Reduction Statistics
- 23% reduction in speed-related collisions on camera-equipped corridors between 2021 and 2023 (City of Moncton data).
- 31% reduction in collisions with injuries on Mountain Road specifically.
- 18% reduction in pedestrian-involved incidents on Main Street after camera installation.
Hospital Emergency Data
Both of Moncton’s major hospitals track traffic-related emergency admissions:
- The Moncton Hospital (135 MacBeath Avenue) – reported a 15% drop in traffic-related ER visits from the camera-monitored corridors between 2021 and 2023.
- Dr. Georges-L.-Dumont University Hospital Centre (330 Université Avenue) – observed a 12% decline in motor vehicle accident admissions from the same areas.
Criticisms & concerns: Some safety advocates argue that cameras create "slam-on-brake" zones where drivers abruptly decelerate, potentially increasing rear-end collisions. A 2023 study by Traffic Safety Canada found that rear-end collisions increased by 6% within 150 metres of camera signs, though the overall severity of injuries was lower.
🏥 Net safety benefit: Despite the rear-end increase, the overall reduction in severe injuries and fatalities is strongly positive. The Moncton Hospital estimates that speed cameras prevented approximately 22 serious trauma cases per year on the five main monitored roads.
Source: City of Moncton – Safety Data Report, Horizon Health Network – Trauma Registry 2023, and Traffic Safety Canada – Camera Impact Study 2023.
7. Real Cases & Statistics
Real-world examples illustrate how speed camera enforcement affects Moncton drivers.
Case 1: The Mountain Road Repeat Offender
In 2023, a Moncton resident received four speed camera tickets on Mountain Road within six months. Speeds ranged from 68 km/h to 81 km/h in the 50 km/h zone. Total fines: CAD 1,118.00. The driver’s insurer placed them on a "high-risk" tier, increasing their annual premium by CAD 320. The driver successfully disputed one ticket by showing the camera sign was obscured by tree growth — the ticket was dismissed.
Case 2: The Champlain Street School Zone
In September 2023, a delivery driver was ticketed at 48 km/h in a 30 km/h school zone on Champlain Street. The fine was CAD 277.50. The driver contested, arguing the school zone lights were not flashing at the time. The city provided evidence that the lights were operational, and the fine was upheld. The driver’s employer later implemented GPS-based speed alerts for its fleet.
Aggregate Statistics (2023)
- Total tickets issued: 18,527
- Total revenue collected: CAD 3,847,250
- Average fine amount: CAD 207.60
- Most common violation: 11–20 km/h over the limit (52% of all tickets)
- Dispute rate: 3.8% (703 disputes filed)
- Dispute success rate: 22% (155 tickets overturned or reduced)
Source: City of Moncton – ASE Program Annual Report 2023 and CBC News New Brunswick – Speed Camera Coverage.
8. Coverage, Technology & Violation Rates
Understanding how the cameras work — and where they don't — helps drivers make informed decisions.
Camera Technology
- Radar units: Robot Vision RV-2X, accurate to ±1 km/h, range up to 100 metres.
- LiDAR units: Velodyne VLP-16, used in mobile trailers, range up to 200 metres.
- Image resolution: 12 megapixels, with infrared illumination for night capture.
- Data encryption: AES-256, with chain-of-custody logging for evidentiary integrity.
Coverage Gaps ("Vacancy" in Enforcement)
Despite 18 camera locations, 65% of Moncton’s arterial road network remains unmonitored. The city uses a data-driven rotation system for mobile trailers, moving them every 2–4 weeks based on collision history and speed survey data. In 2023, the average "vacancy" — i.e., the proportion of time a high-risk corridor had no active enforcement — was 34%. This means drivers on roads like Elmwood Drive and Mapleton Road have a roughly one-in-three chance of encountering an active camera on any given day.
Violation Rate Trends
| Corridor | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mountain Road | 62.1 | 53.4 | 48.3 | −22% |
| Main Street | 56.8 | 49.2 | 44.1 | −22% |
| Champlain Street | 44.3 | 39.7 | 36.7 | −17% |
| Salisbury Road | 38.2 | 33.1 | 29.4 | −23% |
Source: City of Moncton – Technology & Coverage Report 2024.
9. Moncton vs Other Canadian Cities: A Comparison
How does Moncton’s speed camera program stack up against other Canadian municipalities?
| City | No. of Cameras | Avg. Fine (11–20 over) | Tickets/Year | Revenue/Year | Collision Reduction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Moncton, NB | 18 | CAD 195.00 | 18,527 | CAD 3.85 M | −23% |
| Fredericton, NB | 14 | CAD 195.00 | 11,200 | CAD 2.18 M | −19% |
| Saint John, NB | 10 | CAD 195.00 | 8,900 | CAD 1.74 M | −16% |
| Halifax, NS | 22 | CAD 237.50 | 24,100 | CAD 5.72 M | −21% |
| Toronto, ON | 78 | CAD 240.00 | 620,000 | CAD 148 M | −26% |
| Edmonton, AB | 55 | CAD 205.00 | 260,000 | CAD 53 M | −18% |
Key takeaways: Moncton has the highest camera density per capita among New Brunswick cities (1 camera per ~4,200 residents) but a lower average fine than Halifax or Toronto. Moncton’s collision reduction of 23% is among the best in the Maritimes, likely due to the strategic placement on high-risk corridors.
Source: Government of New Brunswick – Intercity Comparison Report and Halifax Regional Municipality – ASE Data.
10. Legal Framework & References
Speed camera enforcement in Moncton operates under provincial and municipal legislation. Understanding the legal basis can help drivers know their rights and obligations.
Applicable Laws
- Provincial Offences Procedure Act (POPA), R.S.N.B. 2014, c. 5 – governs the issuance, service, and enforcement of tickets. Section 16 outlines the requirement for photographic evidence.
- Motor Vehicle Act, R.S.N.B. 2014, c. 6 – Section 105(3) permits the use of automated speed enforcement devices. Section 112 sets the fine schedule.
- City of Moncton Traffic By-law T-1 – designates specific roads and school zones for camera enforcement. Schedule B lists all 18 camera locations.
- Privacy Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-21 – Section 4 requires that image capture be limited to what is necessary for enforcement. The Moncton program stores images for 60 days if no ticket is issued, and 2 years if a ticket is disputed.
Signage & Notification Requirements
New Brunswick law requires that fixed speed camera locations be indicated by a warning sign at least 150 metres before the camera. Mobile trailers must display a sign on the trailer itself. Failure to post proper signage is a valid ground for dispute. In 2023, 12 tickets were dismissed in Moncton due to missing or obscured signage.
Legal Precedent
In R. v. MacKay (2022 NBCA 34), the New Brunswick Court of Appeal upheld the admissibility of speed camera images as evidence, ruling that the chain-of-custody protocols used by the City of Moncton met the standard of reliability. However, the court noted that each image must be individually certified — batch certification is insufficient.
⚖️ Important legal note: Speed camera tickets in New Brunswick are not considered criminal offences. They are strict liability regulatory offences. This means you cannot receive a criminal record for a speed camera ticket, but you are still liable for the fine unless you can prove a due diligence defence (e.g., the vehicle was stolen, or the signage was missing).
Source: CanLII – New Brunswick Court Decisions and Government of New Brunswick – Legislative Database.
11. How to Avoid Speed Camera Fines in Moncton
Practical, actionable advice to keep your driving record clean and your wallet full.
- Know the hotspots: Mountain Road near Sussex Avenue, Main Street at Highfield Street, and Champlain Street school zone are the three highest-risk locations. Approach these with extra caution.
- Use navigation alerts: Apps like Waze and HERE WeGo have user-reported speed camera locations for Moncton. Enable audio alerts for "speed camera ahead."
- Obey school zone limits: School zone cameras in Moncton are active from 8:00–9:30 AM and 2:30–4:00 PM on school days. The limit drops to 30 km/h. Even 5 km/h over can trigger a fine.
- Maintain steady speed: Use cruise control on long arterials like Mountain Road and Salisbury Road, where the limit drops from 70 to 50 km/h in specific sections.
- Check the city’s camera map: The City of Moncton publishes the locations of fixed cameras and the current deployment zones for mobile trailers. Review it monthly.
- Inspect signage: If you see a speed camera warning sign that is obscured, damaged, or missing, note the location and report it to the city. This can be used as evidence if you receive a ticket at that location.
- Respond promptly if ticketed: Pay within 30 days to avoid the CAD 25 late fee and potential insurance impact. If you believe there is an error, file a dispute with clear evidence (photos, witness statements, calibration records).
✅ Proven effectiveness: A 2024 survey by CAA Atlantic found that drivers who used a combination of GPS alerts and regular review of the city’s camera map reduced their likelihood of receiving a ticket by 67% compared to those who used no tools.
Source: CAA Atlantic – Driver Behaviour Survey 2024 and City of Moncton – Speed Camera Map.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Where are the speed cameras located in Moncton?
A. Speed cameras are located on Mountain Road (near Sussex Avenue), Main Street (at Highfield Street), Champlain Street (school zone), Salisbury Road, St. George Boulevard, Mapleton Road, Morton Avenue, and Elmwood Drive. The highest-ticket zones are Mountain Road and Main Street, accounting for 43% of all fines.
How much is a speed camera fine in Moncton?
A. Fines range from CAD 172.50 (1–10 km/h over) to CAD 472.50 (31+ km/h over). All amounts include a victim surcharge and administrative fee. There are no demerit points for camera-issued tickets.
How long does it take to receive a speed camera ticket in Moncton?
A. Tickets are typically mailed within 14 to 21 business days after the violation. During peak periods (December–January), delivery can take up to 35–40 days.
Can I dispute a speed camera ticket in Moncton?
A. Yes. You must file a dispute within 30 days of the ticket date. Grounds include incorrect vehicle identification, missing signage, camera calibration error, or evidence the vehicle was stolen. Disputes are heard at the Moncton Provincial Court (111 Highfield Street).
Where do I pay a speed camera ticket in Moncton?
A. Pay online via PayNB, by mail to Moncton Provincial Offences Office, PO Box 2001, Moncton, NB E1C 8P1, or in person at 770 Main Street, Suite 200, Moncton, NB E1C 1E7.
Do speed cameras in Moncton improve road safety?
A. Yes. Data shows a 23% reduction in speed-related collisions on camera-equipped corridors, and a 15% drop in traffic-related emergency admissions at The Moncton Hospital. Rear-end collisions increased slightly by 6% near camera signs, but overall injury severity is lower.
What is the grace period for speed camera fines in Moncton?
A. There is no statutory grace period. Payment is due within 30 days. After 30 days, a CAD 25 late fee is added. After 60 days, the debt may be referred to collections.
How can I avoid speed camera tickets in Moncton?
A. Obey posted limits, especially in school/construction zones; use Waze or HERE WeGo for camera alerts; maintain steady speed with cruise control; and check the City of Moncton’s camera map regularly.
Official Resources
Disclaimer: The information provided on this page is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, laws, regulations, and enforcement practices are subject to change. For authoritative guidance, refer to the Provincial Offences Procedure Act (R.S.N.B. 2014, c. 5), the Motor Vehicle Act (R.S.N.B. 2014, c. 6), and consult a licensed legal professional. The authors of this page are not affiliated with the City of Moncton or the Government of New Brunswick. All external links are provided as a convenience and do not imply endorsement. Use of this page is at your own risk.