You can't. Tickets never go off your driving record and will always be able to be seen by law enforcement. The good new is that there are only two type of motor vehicle records that can be accessed by commercial vendors such as insurance companies. These are 3 year and 7 year reports and are the only one available in Georgia. Most insurance companies only rate for three years so they only request the 3 year report. There are a few companies that rate for five years so they pull the 7 year report which is more expensive. I hope this answers your question. For full disclosure, I own and operate a small Independent Insurance Agency in Gordon, Georgia and have for 22 years. I also worked as an agent for a direct writer for 3 years before that.
You don't.
Possibly by taking a driving safety course.
Either get a lawyer and go to court or stop getting tickets.
You cannot. Unlike a criminal history record, your driving record is not subject to expungement. It is a compilation of your LIFELONG driving history.
No. Georgia only allows expungements to remove arrest records, in the event that there was no conviction. Georgia has a pardon procedure available post conviction. It does not remove the conviction from your record.
My question is i need somebody to tell me how I can remove those tickets from my record and i have those tickets from last 4 years . I need to remove at least 2 of them because I' m working for a company that won't let me work with them if I still have those 4 points thank for your help
No tickets do not expire. They can be collected on any time after they are issued. Most insurance companies will not count them after a period of time. And the points are removed from the driving record eventually, the length varies by state.
A DUI is a TWO-POINT Violation which remains on your driving record for 10 YEARS!!!! There is nothing you can do to remove it before then. All other TW0-POINT violations stay on your record for 7years.
You cannot remove them from your record in any way. Different insurance companies use different time limits in order to underwrite risks. Most insurance companies use the last 3 years in order to rate your insurance premiums. There are some companies that rate for the previous 5 years. These are the only two periods that I am aware of in rating. Time is the only factor that can help you with tickets and accidents. Tickets and accidents are actually never removed from your driving record but the rating period of the company determines how long they effect your rate.
If its paid and beyond reporting age just notify dmv
In most states you can take a driver's safety course. It's one way to remove points.
Speeding, yes, if you were going under 100 mph. Reckless driving, no chance, only time will remove that from your record. 7-10 years worth of time.