Traffic Law
Traffic Law Vienna: I Defend Your Mobility
License at risk? Received a traffic fine? I examine every case carefully and fight for your right to stay mobile.
A driver's license is more than a document for many people. It means independence, ability to work, and freedom. When it's at risk, a lot is at stake. As an attorney for traffic law in Vienna, I defend your interests on the road.
When Do You Need Traffic Law Advice?
Traffic law encompasses both administrative fines and criminal consequences for serious offenses. Those affected often underestimate the consequences of a traffic violation.
License Revocation
License revocation is one of the harshest sanctions in traffic law. I fight to shorten the revocation period or prevent it entirely.
Drunk Driving
Alcohol offenses in road traffic are strictly punished in Austria. Consequences range from fines to license revocation to criminal penalties.
Speeding Violations
Drove too fast? I check whether the measurement was correct and whether the procedure was properly conducted.
Traffic Accidents
After an accident, many questions arise: Who is at fault? Who pays for the damage? Are there criminal consequences?
My Services in Traffic Law
I defend your rights on the road:
- Defense against traffic fines
- License revocation and retraining courses
- Drunk driving
- Speeding violations
- Traffic accidents (compensation, insurance)
- Representation before authorities and courts
My Approach
Analysis of the Facts
What exactly are you accused of? What evidence exists? I review all documents: charges, measurement protocols, photos, witness statements.
Legality Review
Was the measurement correct? Was the procedure properly conducted? Are there formal errors that undermine the accusation?
Representation in Proceedings
I represent you before the district administrative authority, the regional administrative court, and, if necessary, before the criminal court.
Why I Should Be Your Attorney
Traffic law is detail work. A wrong tolerance deduction, an uncalibrated measuring device, a procedural error: often small details decide between success and failure. I take the time to examine every case carefully.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. You generally have two weeks to file an appeal. Whether it's worthwhile depends on the individual case.
You must surrender your license and may not drive for the duration of the revocation. After the period expires, you can apply for reinstatement.
That depends on the offense. For drunk driving, between one month and several years. For repeated offenses, permanent revocation is possible.
In some cases yes, especially with low blood alcohol levels and first-time offenders. I check what options exist.
