Virginia Expands Speed Cameras to High-Risk Intersections Under a 2024 Law Now in Force

Virginia drivers now face automated speed enforcement in a third category of roadway. A 2024 state law, Senate Bill 336, expanded the Commonwealth's photo speed monitoring program beyond highway work zones and school crossing zones to include what the statute calls high-risk intersection segments. The change took effect July 1, 2024, and the underlying enforcement rules were tightened again by amendments that took effect July 1, 2025.
Information last verified on June 20, 2026.
What the New Law Actually Does
Virginia first authorized photo speed monitoring devices in 2020 for highway work zones and school crossing zones. Senate Bill 336, enacted in the 2024 session as Chapter 670 of the Acts of Assembly, added a third authorized location: the high-risk intersection segment. The amended text is codified at Virginia Code Section 46.2-882.1, titled "Use of photo speed monitoring devices in highway work zones, school crossing zones, and high-risk intersection segments; civil penalty."
The statute defines a high-risk intersection segment narrowly. It is a highway, or portion of one, located not more than 1,000 feet from the property limits of a school, that is part of or adjacent to an intersection containing a marked crosswalk, and that is identified as a location where a traffic fatality has occurred since January 1, 2014. A state or local law enforcement agency may place and operate a camera there only after it certifies that such a fatality occurred in the segment.
The enforcement mechanics are the same across all three zone types. Under Section 46.2-882.1, the operator of a vehicle is liable for a monetary civil penalty if the vehicle is recorded by the device traveling at least 10 miles per hour above the posted speed limit. The civil penalty cannot exceed $100. This is a relatively high trigger; a driver going 5 or 8 miles per hour over the limit does not generate a ticket under the camera program.
Why a Camera Ticket Is Not a Normal Speeding Ticket
The most consequential detail for drivers sits in how the penalty is treated. When the summons is issued by mail, Section 46.2-882.1 states that the violation is not deemed a criminal conviction, is not made part of the operating record kept by the Department of Motor Vehicles, and cannot be used for insurance rating purposes. That is a sharp departure from an officer-issued speeding ticket, which can add demerit points and drive up premiums.

There is a meaningful exception. If a law enforcement officer personally issues a citation at the time of the violation rather than mailing it, the statute treats it like an ordinary citation, meaning it can become part of the driving record and affect insurance. The mail-only protection is what makes the automated program distinct.
The registered owner is the person who receives the notice. The summons is mailed by first-class mail to the address on file with the DMV, and it must include notice of the owner's right to rebut the presumption that the owner was driving by filing an affidavit. The Virginia State Police, which administers the work zone program in coordination with the Virginia Department of Transportation, has stated that personnel review the photographic or video evidence and certify the violation before any notice goes out.
Signage, Due Process, and the 2025 Tightening
Virginia did not leave the camera programs untouched after the 2024 expansion. The statute was amended again in 2025, with changes effective July 1, 2025, that added evidentiary requirements aimed at fairness. For school zones, the updated law requires that a violation be supported by evidence that the applicable warning sign, such as a flashing or activated school-zone sign, was on at the time the speed was recorded. The point is to prevent tickets when a school zone speed limit was not actually in effect.
The statute also requires conspicuous signage. A sign indicating that a photo speed monitoring device is in use must be placed within 1,000 feet of the device, and there is a rebuttable presumption that the sign was properly positioned. Collected data that does not result in a summons is subject to short retention limits under the statute, with agencies generally required to act within tight windows.
These guardrails matter because automated enforcement raises recurring questions about notice and the ability to contest a ticket. The framework Virginia chose, a low-dollar civil penalty with no points and a built-in affidavit process, is the legislature's attempt to balance road safety against the procedural concerns that have dogged camera programs in other states.
How This Connects to the Rest of Your Driving Obligations
Automated speed enforcement is one slice of a larger web of traffic rules that vary by state and, often, by the equipment in your car. Drivers who want to avoid camera tickets near schools should also understand that child passenger rules are separate obligations enforced the traditional way; our overview of United States car seat laws explains how those requirements differ across the country.

Visibility near intersections is another area where state law reaches into your vehicle itself. If you mount a phone or GPS unit to help you watch your speed, be aware of state limits on what can sit on the glass; see our guide to windshield mounting restrictions before you stick anything to the windshield.
The camera program's design also highlights what is different about a criminal traffic charge. A mailed camera penalty stays off your record, but a serious in-person charge does not, and impaired driving cases in particular can take months to resolve; our explainer on why a DUI case can take so long walks through the procedural steps that slow those prosecutions down. Understanding which violations carry points and which do not is the practical takeaway from Virginia's approach.
Analysis: Why This Matters
The following analysis reflects the views of the Recording Law Editorial Team.

Virginia's high-risk intersection expansion is a useful case study in how states are trying to make automated enforcement politically durable. By tying camera placement to a documented fatality since 2014, the legislature gave localities a safety justification that is hard to characterize as a pure revenue grab. By capping the penalty at $100 and keeping mailed violations off the DMV record and out of insurance files, it lowered the stakes for any individual driver, which tends to reduce both legal challenges and public backlash.
The 2025 amendments are the more telling signal. Within a year of expanding the program, lawmakers were already adding evidentiary requirements, such as proof that a school zone sign was active. That suggests the political appetite for cameras comes bundled with persistent unease about accuracy and due process. We read that as a sign that other states considering similar laws should expect to revisit the procedural details quickly, not just the authorization.
For drivers, the practical lesson is to know the category of any ticket you receive. A mailed Virginia camera penalty is an inconvenience, not a record-altering event, and the 10 mph trigger means modest speeding does not generate one. None of this is legal advice, and anyone facing a contested citation should consult a licensed Virginia attorney, but the structure of the law rewards drivers who slow down near schools, work zones, and the specific deadly intersections that now qualify.
Frequently Asked Questions
What did Virginia Senate Bill 336 change in 2024?
SB 336, enacted as Chapter 670 of the 2024 Acts of Assembly, expanded Virginia's photo speed monitoring program to a new category called high-risk intersection segments, in addition to the highway work zones and school crossing zones already authorized since 2020. It took effect July 1, 2024, and is codified at Virginia Code Section 46.2-882.1.
How fast do you have to be going to get a Virginia speed camera ticket?
Under Section 46.2-882.1, a vehicle must be recorded traveling at least 10 miles per hour above the posted speed limit before a civil penalty can be issued. The penalty cannot exceed $100.
Does a Virginia speed camera ticket add points to my license or raise my insurance?
No, not when the summons is mailed. The statute states that a mailed violation is not a criminal conviction, is not added to your DMV operating record, and cannot be used for insurance purposes. The exception is if an officer personally hands you a citation at the scene, which is treated like an ordinary ticket.
Where can Virginia place a speed camera at an intersection?
Only at a high-risk intersection segment, which the law defines as a highway within 1,000 feet of a school, near a marked crosswalk, where a traffic fatality has occurred since January 1, 2014. The agency must certify that fatality before installing a camera, and a warning sign must be posted within 1,000 feet of the device.
Who gets the speed camera ticket if I was not driving?
The summons is mailed to the registered owner at the DMV address on file. The notice must inform the owner of the right to rebut the presumption that the owner was driving by submitting an affidavit, which provides a path to contest the ticket if someone else was operating the vehicle.
What did Virginia change about speed cameras in 2025?
Amendments effective July 1, 2025 added evidentiary guardrails. For school zones, a violation must be supported by evidence that the warning sign or flashing light was active when the speed was recorded, ensuring tickets are not issued when a reduced school zone limit was not actually in effect.
Sources and References
- Code of Virginia Section 46.2-882.1, Use of photo speed monitoring devices in highway work zones, school crossing zones, and high-risk intersection segments; civil penalty (amended 2020 c. 1232; 2024 c. 670; 2025 cc. 434, 670)(law.lis.virginia.gov).gov
- Virginia State Police, Work Zone Speed Safety Camera Program (10+ mph threshold, $100 civil penalty, no criminal record, no insurance impact, trooper review)(vsp.virginia.gov).gov
- Virginia State Police, Report on Photo Speed Monitoring Device Usage by Local and State Law Enforcement (January 2026)(vsp.virginia.gov).gov
- Virginia State Crime Commission, Photo Speed Monitoring Devices presentation (December 2, 2025)(vscc.virginia.gov).gov
- Code of Virginia Section 46.2-882, Determining speed with various devices(law.lis.virginia.gov).gov