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Exceptional Hardship Solicitors
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If you accumulate 12 or more penalty points within a three-year period, the court must impose a minimum six-month driving ban under the totting-up rules. For many drivers, this can have devastating personal and financial consequences. The court may reduce or avoid the ban if you can demonstrate exceptional hardship.

Driver Defence Solicitors for England & Wales

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Fixed Fee

Defence Lawyers.

At Verida Legal, we specialise exclusively in motoring law. Our solicitors have successfully represented hundreds of drivers facing disqualification, helping them keep their licences through well-prepared exceptional hardship arguments.

We provide free initial advice and fixed-fee representation, giving you clear, practical support at every stage.

“Totting up” occurs when penalty points from multiple motoring offences reach 12 or more within a three-year rolling period. Once you reach that threshold, the court must impose a minimum 6-month disqualification.


If you have been disqualified for totting within the last three years, the minimum period increases — typically to 12 months.


The court has no discretion to ignore the ban unless you establish that a ban would cause you exceptional hardship.


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What Is Totting-Up?

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What Is Exceptional Hardship?

Exceptional hardship is a legal argument asking the court to reduce or avoid a totting-up disqualification.


The hardship must go beyond the ordinary inconvenience of losing your licence. Loss of employment alone is not automatically exceptional. The court looks at the wider impact — particularly on others.


Examples may include:


  • Loss of employment or business closure
  • Financial hardship affecting dependants, employees or family members
  • Caring responsibilities for children, elderly or disabled relatives
  • Medical needs that require personal transport
  • Geographical isolation where no practical transport alternatives exist


The hardship must be exceptional and supported by credible evidence. Our solicitors prepare structured, persuasive arguments to satisfy the court. 

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How We Prepare

Exceptional hardship hearings are evidence-based and can involve cross-examination. Preparation matters. We:


  • Review your driving record and calculate active points
  • Assess your employment, financial and family circumstances
  • Identify all individuals who would be affected by a ban
  • Gather supporting documentation (employment letters, financial records, medical evidence)
  • Prepare structured submissions
  • Represent you in court


We present the application clearly and realistically. Weak or exaggerated arguments are often rejected.

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What Happens at a Hearing?

An exceptional hardship application is heard in open court before the magistrates. You will usually be required to give sworn evidence and may be cross-examined by the prosecution.


The court will consider:


The impact of disqualification on you

The impact on others (which often carries greater weight)

The credibility and consistency of your evidence

Whether the hardship goes beyond the normal consequences of losing a licence


The burden is on you to prove exceptional hardship on the balance of probabilities. The magistrates will then decide whether to reduce or avoid the disqualification.


Preparation and presentation are critical.

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Repeat Applications

You cannot rely on the same exceptional hardship reasons within three years of a successful application. However, if your circumstances have changed materially, a new argument may be possible. We review your previous application and advise whether new grounds can be made.

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What to Do if You Are Totting Up

Do not ignore it —  Attendance at court will be required.

Contact us immediately —  Seek legal advice before entering a plea.

Have your paperwork ready —  We’ll review any paperwork you have received.


Early preparation significantly improves the quality of the application.


Call us on 01942 364493 for free initial advice or use our contact form and we’ll call you back.


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Exclusive focus on motoring law

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Fixed fees for every case type.

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Free initial consultation with a solicitor

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Nationwide representation