If they were driving it with your knowledge or permission, yes.
Actually, no it won't.
Each person is liable for their own actions, regardless of the car they are in.
The driver's insurance will go up and would also be liable for any criminal acts.
I would assume that if someone else is involved in an accident, while driving your car, your rates will go up?
Your insurance will NOT be affected if someone used your car and got a citation BUT,,, If they had an accident and had NO insurance YOU would be involved. If your registration and or insurance is not up to date, you and the driver will pay some fines and get violation points for the above.
no, but if you want to pay less for the ticket then yes
The person who gets a ticket for a moving violation is the person who will be affected on their insurance rates. Your insurer checks your driving record. They have no way of checking who else may have received a ticket while driving your vehicle.
Tickets are issued to people not cars. If you get a ticket while driving someone else's car, it only affects their insurance costs if you are a listed driver on their policy. The ticket is for the driver.
If this is a traffic ticket, your insurance would take the hit.
The person in who's name the the ticket was issued is responsible for the ticket.
Insurance rates are based primarily on your personal driving habits and record, so if you receive a ticket while driving a rental car it can still be reported to your insurance company because the citing officer has your drivers license information. So in short, it is definitely possible for your insurance company to raise your rate based on a speeding ticket you received while driving a rented vehicle.
This is easy to answer. The person who was driving gets the ticket because that person is the one who broke the law.
you are
No, but your insurance company can still see the violation on your driving record and raise your rates at their discretion.
Yes, in some cases your insurance company will raise the rates on your policy if you receive a ticket for driving while using the cell phone. AAA offers discounts for safe drivers.
No, the state does not notify insurance companies each time a person gets a ticket. It is up to the insurance companies to periodically get a persons driving record. Surprising to most people insurance companies don't do this all to often. It's expensive so they usually only get your record if you give them a reason to such as file a collision claim.
While your insurance company only cares who pays the insurance policy, the DMV doesn't care who owns the car. The driver who causes the accident will have it show up on his/her driving record (if there was a ticket issued).