They stay on, for 3 yrs or whenever the insurance company renews they re-run your driving record.
You need to contact your agent or the policy services dept. of your insurance company and they will be able to answer this question for you.
when do points come of license for insurance
Contact your agent or the policy services dept. for your insurance company to get the answer to this question.
Contact your agent or policy services for your insurance company and they will be able to tell you.
If a student is on their parents insurance they should stay on it as long as possible. However, the student's parents should check with their policy as to what benefits are available if the student does not stay in the local area. When a parent's insurance policy is not an option one can check with the school they plan to attend. Most schools offer student insurance. Another option would be for the student to purchase their own health insurance policy.
It's normally 2 years in the UK.
It is up to the policy holder. When I had to stay with my aunt for a long time we kept my insurance in my state of origin. It works too when you have a child in college and you are in another state. Contact insurance agent or insurance company to verify.
As with most states, three years for insurance purposes, and seven years on your MVR.
I believe most policies provide that you can stay on a parents' policy as long as you're enrolled as a student (I'm not sure whether part or full time).
Yes, You could still stay on her policy whey you move out and continue to drive as long as you have your valid driver's license.
I don't know exactly how AIG is setup but tickets and accidents usually stay on your insurance for 3yrs. During that 3yr. time frame you will have points on your insurance, the more points the higher the premium. Some companies will look back as far as 5yrs. If your accident is older than 3yrs. but still within 5 it my affect how your policy is tiered. The accident at that point my not cost you any points but because you have had a ticket or accident in the last 5yrs. you may be placed in a different tier than someone with a clean driving record because you are considered higher risk.
Normally in all states they stay on your record forever. Some states do purge after a certain length of time. For drivers license points and insurance points it is usually three years but some insurance companies are now going back five years. Your insurance points are normally what will cost you and different companies assess points according to their own schedule.