In Tasmania you can ask the reviewer for leniency — accepting what happened but explaining why the fine being withdrawn is fair. In Tasmania, you apply to the issuing authority for the fine to be withdrawn, setting out your circumstances. 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 $49.50You don’t have to work this out yourself. Once you’ve entered your case details, Fight My Fine recommends the stronger path for your situation — and you choose. Disputing argues the fine shouldn’t stand; asking for leniency accepts what happened but asks for a softer outcome.
You can go with our recommendation or switch — it’s always your call.
What matters is your genuine situation:
In Tasmania, you apply to the issuing authority for the fine to be withdrawn, setting out your circumstances. Be honest and respectful, set out your circumstances, attach anything that supports them, and make a clear, reasonable request — within 28 days of the issue date.
A good leniency request acknowledges the situation, explains your circumstances, refers to supporting material, and makes a clear ask. Fight My Fine drafts exactly this from a few plain-English questions — tailored to Tasmania, as an editable Word document you send.
Yes. In Tasmania, you apply to the issuing authority for the fine to be withdrawn, setting out your circumstances. It is free to ask.
Disputing argues the fine should not stand. Leniency accepts what happened but asks for a softer outcome based on your circumstances. The best path depends on your situation, and Fight My Fine recommends one after you enter your details.
You have 28 days from the issue date to pay, apply for the fine to be withdrawn, or elect to have it heard by a court.
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.