
You can handle two out of three traffic violations, whether processed at the traffic police station/branch or through the "Traffic Management 12123" app. Each violation must be processed one by one. If you don't have enough points on your license, you can either find someone else to handle it with their license or wait until the next year (though you may need to pay additional late fees). Below is relevant information about handling traffic violations: 1. Documents required for processing violations at the vehicle management office: original vehicle license of the violating vehicle, original ID of the point-deducted driver, and original driver's license of the point-deducted driver. With these three documents ready, the driver can personally go to the vehicle management office or traffic police station service hall to take a number and queue for processing. 2. Processing time: According to traffic laws, after a vehicle violation occurs, it usually takes 3-7 days to be queried online or receive an SMS notification, with a maximum delay of 13 working days. The vehicle owner must go to the local traffic police station to handle the violation within 15 days after it occurs.

Last time I dealt with 6 traffic violations, and I went twice to handle them, so it's completely feasible to process two out of three violations first. The key is which channel you choose: mobile apps allow you to select individual violations for processing, and on-site windows can also specify handling partial violations. The advantage of batch processing is less financial pressure. For example, once when my salary hadn't arrived, I first processed the two smaller fines. However, be sure to complete all within the same scoring cycle. Also, if it involves out-of-town violations, it's recommended to handle them all at once to avoid repeated trips. The safest approach is to first check all violation details online, including whether points are deducted, and then decide how to batch them most cost-effectively.

As a commuter who drives 60 kilometers daily, batch processing traffic violations is my usual strategy. It's common to handle two out of three violations, and I deliberately leave the 10% speeding violation to be processed next month when using the 12123 APP. However, a reminder: if there are point-deducting violations, it's advisable to prioritize handling them to avoid exceeding 12 points; fines are best settled three months before the annual inspection, especially consecutive violations caught by electronic police which are prone to cumulative penalties. Remember last time my neighbor kept one violation unprocessed and got stuck for over a month during the annual vehicle inspection, plus additional late fees.

It's quite normal to handle traffic violations in batches, which is exactly what I do. There's no issue with only processing two out of the three recent violations—I did just that last week at the self-service machine in the traffic police station. When selecting two violations for processing, the system generates separate penalty decisions and payment slips, leaving the remaining one for next time. The precautions are simple: keep all processing receipts to avoid duplicate payments; if it involves an on-site ticket, it must be handled within 15 days; for point-deducting violations, pay attention to the remaining points on your driver's license. In practice, the staff fully accept partial processing without requiring any special explanation.


