In the Northern Territory, parking fines are reviewed by the council or agency that issued it. You apply to the issuing council or agency for a review by the due date shown on your notice, explaining why it should be withdrawn — for example unclear signs or a faulty meter — and attaching photos. It’s free to ask.
Check your fine in minutes →Free case-strength check first — if your grounds are weak, we'll tell you · letters from $10.50, capped at $49.50Parking fines in the Northern Territory are reviewed by the council or agency that issued it. You apply to them directly — our tool addresses your letter to the right body for your situation.
Whether any apply depends on your situation:
You apply to the issuing council or agency for a review by the due date shown on your notice. Photos are powerful for parking matters — the sign (or missing sign), the meter, your permit, or where you parked. Attach them, keep it factual, and make a clear request.
A good parking request names the notice, states the ground plainly, points to your photos, and asks clearly for the fine to be withdrawn. Fight My Fine builds this in minutes — tailored to the Northern Territory and addressed to the council or agency that issued it, as an editable Word document you send yourself.
Parking fines in the Northern Territory are reviewed by the council or agency that issued it.
Yes, unclear, missing or obscured signage is a common ground. Photos of the sign (or the lack of one) where you parked strengthen the request. The reviewer decides on the merits.
Act by the due date shown on your notice. The Northern Territory doesn’t publish a single state-wide review deadline for traffic fines, so check the date on your notice and apply as early as you can.
From $10.50 — 10% of your fine, GST included, with a $10.50 minimum and a $49.50 cap. There is a free case-strength check before you pay.
Fight My Fine is a self-help tool, not a law firm, and this page is general information, not legal advice. You are the author and sender of every letter. The issuing authority makes the final decision on any review. For serious matters or court, speak with a qualified lawyer or a free service such as LawAccess NSW.