
Karnataka's 50 per cent traffic fine concession scheme saw 32,486 pending cases settled on its opening day, June 21, 2026, collecting Rs 96.73 lakh in a single day.
The scheme, which runs until July 10, 2026, covers police-registered e-challans up to May 2026 and transport department cases from 1991 to 2022.
Karnataka is sitting on an enormous backlog of unpaid traffic fines. The state currently has over 5.05 crore pending traffic violation cases, with unpaid penalties amounting to nearly Rs 2,727 crore. That is a staggering figure, and it reflects years of accumulated non-compliance from vehicle owners who either ignored their challans or simply found the process of settling them too cumbersome to bother with.
The government's response to this problem is a time-limited concession scheme that makes settling dues considerably easier on the wallet. Through an order issued on June 4, 2026, the Karnataka government granted a 50 per cent concession on fines for pending traffic e-challan cases registered by the police department, with the scheme coming into effect on June 21, 2026.
The concession applies to all pending traffic e-challan cases registered by the police department up to May 2026, and has also been extended to cases recorded by the Transport Department between 1991 and 2022 that remain unpaid. Vehicle owners simply need to pay half of the outstanding penalty amount during the 20-day window to have their cases closed entirely.
The decision was taken following a proposal from the Karnataka State Legal Services Authority, ahead of the National Lok Adalat scheduled for July 11, 2026. The authority had flagged that despite previous settlement drives, a large number of cases remain pending, with an estimated Rs 2,827 crore still recoverable.
The response on day one was hard to ignore. A total of 32,486 pending traffic violation cases were settled through various prescribed modes of payment across the state, with the police department collecting Rs 96,73,800 in fines on Sunday through the settlement drive.
It is the kind of turnout that suggests many motorists had simply been waiting for an incentive to act. Half-price is a compelling offer, and it clearly resonated.
The special concession scheme came into effect on June 21 and will remain available until July 10. That leaves vehicle owners with a narrow window to act, and traffic police officials have been unambiguous about urging people to use it.
Authorities believe the scheme will significantly reduce the backlog of violations while improving compliance with traffic regulations across the state.
For anyone with a pending e-challan in Karnataka, the maths are simple enough. Pay half now, or pay the full amount later once the concession window closes.
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