Suspended Licence & Reinstatement
Driving while suspended is a serious offence — but suspensions can also be challenged or shortened.
Driving while suspended (HTA s.53) is a charge with cascading consequences: fines from $1,000 to $5,000 on a first conviction, an automatic 6-month additional suspension, and possible jail time. Reinstating a suspended licence often requires fines to be paid, defensive-driving courses to be completed, and — for medical or administrative suspensions — work with the Ministry of Transportation.
Muna helps drivers in two situations: defending a charge of driving while suspended, and navigating reinstatement after a suspension is in place. The right strategy depends on whether the suspension was court-ordered, administrative, medical, or for unpaid fines.
What Muna handles
- ●Driving while under suspension (HTA s.53)
- ●Court-ordered, administrative, and unpaid-fine suspensions
- ●Reinstatement strategy and Ministry follow-up
- ●Medical suspension reviews
The information above is general. The right defence depends on the facts of your case, the wording of the charge, the disclosure from the prosecutor, and the court. Speak with Muna about your specific situation before pleading or making any decision.