A Fine Notice Arrived: You Have Exactly Two Weeks, and Here's What Actually Works

If you receive a Bußgeldbescheid, a formal fine notice, from an Ordnungsamt or similar authority, whether for a noise complaint, a traffic matter, or another Ordnungswidrigkeit, you have exactly two weeks from the delivery date to file an Einspruch, a formal appeal, and this deadline counts working days specifically, if the notice was delivered on a Saturday, the clock starts the following Monday instead. The appeal itself has to go to the specific authority that issued the fine notice, submitted either in writing or given verbally on record (zur Niederschrift) at their office, and it genuinely needs to actually reach them before the deadline expires, sending it by registered mail is the commonly recommended way to have real proof of timely delivery. One detail that removes a lot of pressure: you don't need to provide detailed reasoning when you first file the appeal, the responsible authority is required to examine whether your appeal has merit regardless. After you file, the authority reviews the case, potentially conducting further investigation, and either withdraws the notice or maintains its original decision. If they maintain it, the matter proceeds to court, which then makes the final determination. If you let the two-week window pass without filing, the notice becomes legally binding and enforceable, so acting within the deadline matters more than having a fully developed argument ready on day one.

The Official Rule

Receiving a Bußgeldbescheid, a formal fine notice from an Ordnungsamt or comparable authority, triggers a real, specific timeline, and understanding the actual mechanics of the appeal process matters more than having a perfect argument ready immediately.

The deadline is exactly two weeks from the delivery date, and it’s calculated in working days specifically, not simple calendar days. This detail genuinely matters in edge cases: if the notice was delivered on a Saturday, the two-week counting period begins on the following Monday instead of the Saturday itself, giving you a bit more real time than a naive calendar count might suggest.

The Einspruch process at a glance
StepWhat's required
Deadline2 weeks from delivery (working days), Saturday delivery starts the clock the following Monday
Where to fileDirectly with the authority that issued the notice
How to fileIn writing, or verbally on record (zur Niederschrift) at their office
Reasoning required upfrontNo, the authority must examine merit regardless

The appeal itself has a real procedural requirement worth getting right: it goes specifically to the authority that issued the fine, not a general court or separate body. You can submit it in writing, or give it verbally on record (zur Niederschrift) directly at their office. What genuinely matters is that it actually reaches them before the deadline expires, this is why sending it by registered mail is the commonly recommended approach, it gives you real, documented proof of timely delivery if that ever becomes relevant.

One detail that removes a lot of unnecessary pressure at the filing stage: you don’t need a fully developed legal argument to submit the initial appeal. The responsible authority is required to examine whether your appeal has merit as part of their own process, this isn’t something you need to prove conclusively in your first submission. The practical priority is genuinely about filing correctly and within the deadline, not arriving with a complete case on day one.

After you file, a real, multi-step process follows, not just a single yes-or-no response. The authority reviews the case, which may include further investigation, and then either withdraws the notice entirely or maintains its original decision. If they maintain it, the matter doesn’t simply end there, it proceeds to court, which makes the actual final determination. This means an unfavorable initial review from the issuing authority isn’t automatically the last word.

If the two-week window passes without a filed appeal, the consequence is real and final: the notice becomes legally binding and enforceable. There’s no informal grace period beyond the stated deadline, which is why acting promptly, even with a simple, initial filing, matters more than waiting to prepare a stronger case first.

An opened official fine notice envelope and letter next to a wall calendar with a date circled in red

What Real People Say

People navigating their first Bußgeldbescheid consistently describe relief at learning they don’t need a complete legal argument ready to file the initial appeal, several mention nearly missing the deadline while trying to research and prepare a thorough response first, when a simple, timely filing would have preserved their right to appeal regardless.

The working-days detail for the deadline calculation comes up specifically in practical guidance as a point worth double-checking rather than assuming, since miscounting based on simple calendar days risks either missing the actual deadline or unnecessarily rushing when there was genuinely a bit more time available.

Step by Step

  1. Note the exact delivery date of your Bußgeldbescheid, and calculate your two-week deadline in working days, accounting for weekend delivery specifically.
  2. File your Einspruch directly with the authority that issued the notice, not a separate court or general body.
  3. Submit in writing or verbally on record at their office, sending by registered mail if writing, for documented proof of timely delivery.
  4. Don’t delay filing to prepare a complete argument first, a simple, timely appeal preserves your rights, detailed reasoning can follow.
  5. If the authority maintains its decision after reviewing your appeal, know the matter proceeds to court, this isn’t the final step.

Compliance Note

This page explains the general Einspruch process for a Bußgeldbescheid in Germany, but this is not legal advice, and specific procedures can vary by case and authority. For your specific situation, confirm current requirements directly with the issuing authority or consult a lawyer.

FAQ & Common Pitfalls

The notice arrived on a Saturday. Does our two weeks start counting from that day?

No, and this is worth knowing specifically, since it genuinely affects your real deadline. If a notice is delivered on a Saturday, the two-week counting period begins on the following Monday instead, giving you effectively a bit more real time than if the delivery date itself started the clock. This detail is easy to miss if you're just counting calendar days from the literal delivery date.

Do we need a lawyer or a fully developed legal argument to file the initial appeal?

No, not to file it. You genuinely don't need to provide detailed reasoning at the point of filing the Einspruch itself, the responsible authority is required to examine whether your appeal has merit as part of their own process. This means the practical priority is making sure the appeal is filed correctly and on time, not having a complete legal case ready on day one, you can develop your specific reasoning afterward if the matter proceeds further.

If the authority reviews our appeal and decides to maintain the original fine, is that the final word?

No, that's not the end of the process. If the authority maintains its original decision after reviewing your appeal, the matter moves to court, which then makes the actual final determination. This means an unfavorable initial review from the issuing authority itself isn't automatically the last step, there's a further, independent judicial stage available.