forever
Added: DMV records do not expire - they are a lifelong accumulation of your driving history.
When a person receives a ticket for a civil or criminal traffic offense, the ticket will stay on your record whether it was paid or not. The state of Texas also uses a point system against a persons driving record.
How long violations stay on your record varies from state to state. In Maine, a violation will stay on your driving record for one year.
Each state has there own laws on how long driving after suspension stays on your driving record. For example, a suspension stays on record for three years in California, but in Michigan it stays for seven years.
For 87 years. Give or take a few.
Depending on the state where the DUI occured, it could remain on the driving record forever.
It takes 4 years to be removed from your driving record in NY State, but an employer can go back and look at your record for 10 years.
Criminal records are forever.
It does not depend on the state, it depends on the school.
They can suspend your driving privilege in the state of Oklahoma, meaning that, if they do this, and you're caught driving in Oklahoma on any license, it'll be treated as you driving on a suspended license. As for actually suspending the license, they can request that the state of Texas suspend it, and the state of Texas will make the call as to whether they comply or not.
It depends on what state you are in and the reasons for the revocation.
NO.
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.