Insurance records are kept by private companies, not by the governmnent. There is no time limit for the storage of this type of data.
Contact your agent or policy services for your insurance company and they will be able to tell you.
Normally accidents don't go on your license record. They go on your insurance history, and most insurance companies look back up to 10 years.
An at-fault accident and other traffic violations will stay on your driving record for 3 years, but your insurance company may charge you higher premiums for 5 or more years.
Such records are not consideered to be "public records" and are not regulated by statute law, so it is entirely up to the insurance companies involved.
Insurance companies will maintain a permanent record of the incident, and if you were ticketed or charged your DMV record will always reflect that fact. Your DMV driving record is a running compilation of your entire driving history.
Insurance companies look back three years. As for your MVR, it remains on your record either seven or ten years, dependent on your state.
No. As long as you were not involved in the accident then it shouldn't affect your driving record. You must also not be the owner of the vehicle that was involved in the claim.
Depends on what insurance company it is.
In what state? At fault in MA you are penalized for 6 years. The record stays in the DMV computer forever. 4lifeguild
The liability section of a Home insurance policy covers you anywhere any time as long as it is not malicious intent.
10 years
You will continue to pay insurance premium to renew the policy,irrespective of the claim to be submitted after truck accident.