Hoon laws work on three separate levels
Victoria’s anti-hoon laws, in place since July 2006, don’t operate as a single penalty, they escalate across three distinct levels depending on how many hoon offences you’ve committed. A first offence can see your vehicle impounded or immobilised by police for up to 30 days, entirely separate from whatever happens with the underlying charge in court. A second hoon offence within six years allows a magistrate to order impoundment or immobilisation for up to three months. A third hoon offence within that same six-year window opens the door to forfeiture, where you permanently lose ownership of the vehicle. Understanding which level applies to your situation is the first step to understanding what you’re actually facing.
What actually counts as a hoon driving offence?
The list is longer, and broader, than most people expect. Some offences trigger impoundment the very first time they happen, including driving while disqualified, suspended or unlicensed, drink-driving with a BAC of 0.10 or higher, speeding 45 km/h or more above the limit, doing burnouts or deliberately making a vehicle skid or smoke, disobeying a police direction to stop, and organising or participating in a street race. Other offences only become hoon offences if it’s your second one within six years, including drink-driving with a BAC under 0.10, driving with an illicit drug in your system, and certain emergency-vehicle-related offences. The exact offence you’re charged with, and where it sits on this list, determines what police and the court can actually do to your vehicle.
Your vehicle can be impounded before you’re even convicted
This surprises a lot of people. The initial 30-day impoundment or immobilisation isn’t a court-ordered penalty, it’s an administrative power police can use immediately, based on reasonable grounds, before any charge has been proven in court. Police don’t even need to know who was driving at the time. This means your vehicle can be sitting in a police storage yard while the actual criminal or traffic charge is still weeks or months away from being heard. The impoundment and the prosecution are two separate processes running on different timelines, and one doesn’t wait for the other.
Does it matter if you weren’t the one driving?
Not as much as you’d hope. A magistrate can still make an impoundment, immobilisation or forfeiture order against your vehicle even if someone else was behind the wheel when the hoon offence happened. If you’re the registered owner, you’ll need to explain to the court why an order would cause exceptional hardship to you or someone else, which is a genuinely difficult standard to meet. The court may instead accept an undertaking, a formal promise that you won’t let that person drive your vehicle again for a set period. Break that promise, and the court can still impound, immobilise or sell your vehicle later.
The 48-hour window shapes how police act
Timing matters more than most drivers realise. If police act within 48 hours of the alleged offence, they can impound or immobilise the vehicle immediately, on the spot. Miss that window, and they switch to a different mechanism, serving a surrender notice on the vehicle’s registered owner instead. That notice usually has to be served within 10 days, but police get up to 42 days if the offence was caught on a speed camera, involved disobeying a direction to stop, or occurred during a police pursuit. For drink or drug driving matters requiring a blood or saliva sample, police have up to three months to serve that notice, reflecting how long toxicology results can take to come back.
How does a second offence change things?
A second hoon offence within six years shifts the decision from police to the Magistrates’ Court. Instead of an automatic 30-day impoundment, a magistrate can order impoundment or immobilisation for up to three months once you’ve pleaded guilty or been found guilty. This isn’t automatic either, the court weighs how serious the offence is, whether you’ve faced similar charges before, and what else is happening in your life, alongside the safety of the public. Getting legal advice becomes more important at this stage, since the consequences step up considerably from a first offence.
Forfeiture is the most serious outcome available
A third hoon offence within six years opens the door to a forfeiture order, the most severe consequence under these laws. Forfeiture means you stop owning the vehicle entirely, ownership transfers to the state, and the vehicle is either sold or destroyed. If it’s sold, the proceeds are kept by the state, not returned to you. This isn’t a temporary inconvenience like impoundment, it’s a permanent loss, and it applies regardless of the vehicle’s value or how long you’ve owned it. Reaching this stage usually means a pattern of hoon offences has already been established over several years.
Can you actually avoid these orders?
Sometimes, but it’s genuinely difficult. The general rule is that a magistrate will make an impoundment, immobilisation or forfeiture order unless you can show it would cause exceptional hardship to you or someone else. Courts have treated this as a high bar to clear. In some situations, the court doesn’t have a choice at all, for example, if you were hoon driving while already suspended from driving, an order becomes effectively mandatory. Knowing whether an exceptional hardship argument is realistic in your situation is something worth getting advice on early, not after the hearing.
The court case and the vehicle order are two separate battles
Fighting the impoundment or forfeiture order isn’t the same as fighting the underlying charge, and you may need to think about both. Separately from what happens to your vehicle, a hoon driving conviction can bring a fine, demerit points, a mandatory safe driving program, licence disqualification or suspension, and in serious cases, imprisonment. All of this goes on your criminal record. Treating the vehicle order as the only issue, while ignoring the underlying charge, is a common and costly mistake.
What should you do if you’re facing a hoon driving charge?
Get advice as early as possible, ideally before your first court date, since some vehicle order applications only become available once you’ve entered a plea. Speak with a criminal defence lawyer about your specific offence, your prior history, and whether an exceptional hardship argument is realistic before deciding how to plead.
