District Court of the Second Circuit — Wailuku Division
Maui County’s District Court in Wailuku. Handles civil traffic infractions issued by Maui PD and DOT across Maui, Moloka’i, and Lāna’i.
HRS §291D-7 lets you contest a civil traffic infraction by mailing a Written Statement instead of appearing in court. Complete Option 2 (deny) or Option 3 (admit and mitigate) on the back of your citation, attach a separate written statement of defense plus any photos or exhibits, and mail it within 21 calendar days of the citation date. Do NOT include payment:
District Court of the Second Circuit — Wailuku Division
2145 Main St
Wailuku, HI 96793
The District Court of the Second Circuit accepts a Written Statement contest under HRS §291D-7. Mark Option 2 (Deny) or Option 3 (Mitigate) on the back of your citation, attach a separate written statement of your defense (with any photos or witness statements), and mail it so it reaches the court within 21 days of the citation issue date. No payment is required with the answer.
Hawaii does NOT require payment when you mail your Written Statement under HRS §291D-7 — the court rules in writing and mails notice of any amount owed. Only pay now if you are admitting the infraction without contesting. Hawaii’s eCourt Kokua portal accepts online payment for most civil traffic infractions: District Court of the Second Circuit — Wailuku Division’s online pay portal.
Every extra week between the citation and your filing is another week the officer can forget. Hawaii courts routinely grant first-time extension requests as a matter of course — you generally do not need a hardship reason.
- Typical grant
- 30 additional days
- Method
- Call the traffic clerk
- Bail deadline
- Extended with the response deadline.
- Traffic clerk phone
- (808) 244-2800
“I’d like to request a 30-day extension on my response deadline so I can prepare and file a Trial by Written Declaration. My casenumber is ____.”
Common Hawaii violations eligible by mail
Not legal advice. Courthouse addresses, hours, and filing procedures change. Verify with the official Hawaii court website before mailing or appearing.