75 years.
Last I new of was 7 years, but a conviction would stay on record for 10 yrs and life if it was felony DUI.
a certain period of time, depending on the state. In most states, a DUI/OWI conviction will stay on your driving record for at least 5-10 years. However, it is important to note that the conviction may remain on your criminal record indefinitely.
In the state of Wisconsin, a conviction for a speeding ticket is eligible to be removed from a person's driving record five years after the date of the conviction. Certain alcohol related convictions remain on a person's record for 55 years in Wisconsin.
A record of a DUI conviction on your drivers license history is permanent.
5 years In Virgina, 7 years.
For 87 years. Give or take a few.
Depends on the type of conviction it is and where you are from. Most places the conviction stays on your driving record for 2-3 years after this time you will get your demerit points rewarded back to you. Many jurisdictions have programs in place where you get demerits back as time goes along. For example, if you had 3 demerit points deducted you may get 1 back each year the conviction is still standing on your record. Many jurisdictions also allow insurance companies to keep record of your driving habits for the past 4 years. So where in the eyes of the law after 3 years you may have a clean driving record, according to your insurance you still have a conviction. Convictions on your "insurance driving record" affect the costs and eligibility of coverage.
In the state of California, a charge and conviction of reckless driving will stay on your record for 7 years. This will begin on the date the violation was given.
A DUI stays on your record for seventy five years. Some state keep DUI record for life.
Reckless driving will stay on your criminal record indefinitely, or until it is expunged. The charge will remain on your driving record for five years.
The time a DUI conviction stays on a public record varies between states. In some states it is on one's record forever. In other states it will remain on record for at least 5 years.
Contrary to popular belief, Our driving records are permanent. Fortunately though, most insurance companies in the U.S. only check the last 3 to 5 years of your driving record. It never comes off your driving record. It just gets stale after a certain number of years. Depending on how many years back your insurer checks your driving record, either they will see it or they won't.