Duval County Approved Traffic School Online
Got a traffic ticket in Duval County and you are now dealing with the Duval County Traffic Courts? Forget about that traffic ticket right now. When it comes to dismissing your Duval traffic ticket and keeping your driving record clean, conveniently, and effortlessly, only our online traffic school course has the experience to back you up.
Clear your Ticket with Us
- Court Approved
- Simple Registration Process
- Start Immediately
- Instant Completion Results
- Daily Certificate Processing
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- We Are Bonded & Insured
No Traveling. No Inconveniences. No Worries.
Avoid all the problems of getting and fighting a traffic ticket with our Alachua County online traffic school course. We have successfully helped thousands of drivers clear their ticket by taking a state approved traffic school course. By taking our simple, easy-to-follow online traffic school course, you'll gain peace of mind knowing that you are well on your way to a clean driving record , quickly and easily.
Click It 2 Dismiss It
Stay away from the classroom traffic school classes that you must attend on a Saturday. Take traffic school online on your own time and from the comfort of your own home. Our traffic school course is state approved by the Florida Department of Highway Safety & Motor Vehicles. Study all at once or over time. Our traffic school course is interactive with text, video, flash, and images. When you pass our course your certificate is processed instantly and you can print a confirmation directly online.
Did you know?
Duval County was created in 1822. It was named for William Pope Duval, Territorial Governor of Florida from 1822 to 1834. When Duval County was created (on the same day as Jackson County) it covered a massive area, from the Suwannee River on the west to a line running from Jacksonville to the mouth of the St. Johns River on the east. On October 1, 1968, the government of Duval County was consolidated with the government of the City of Jacksonville, although the Duval County cities of Atlantic Beach, Baldwin, Jacksonville Beach, and Neptune Beach are not included in the corporate limits of Jacksonville, and maintain their own municipal governments. In the early 1990s these three beach cities considered separating from Duval and forming Ocean County, an idea that had been kicking around since consolidation, but after the 1995 election of Jacksonville mayor John Delaney, a resident and former Mayor of Neptune Beach, the idea was dropped for good. (Wikipedia)