As far as I know, it does not. I had a reckless violation from another state, that never showed up on my VA license as far as my insurance company was concerned. Only violations I had received in VA.
It is up to another state court to submiss to Virgina DMV.
If you have not pay your violation in another state. There COULD be a warrant issued for your arrest (any states) in that state.
Most likely it will.
Points remain on your license for two years in the state of Virginia. However, your offense may follow you a lot longer.
Yes.
Your driving record NEVER 'goes away.' It is a running record of your entire driving history going all the way back to when you first got your license. All states share their DMV information with every other state.
All driving records are interconnected now by scanning your license. A ticket in Connecticut will be on the national driving record database. It will count as points against your license.
Not if it's a CLEAN record!
That depends on the points that are assigned to each Virginia speeding ticket. Virginia has a 12 point system so your license is suspended if you acquire 12 points against your license. You have the option of taking the voluntary Virginia online traffic school which will put five points back on your Virginia driving record. The Virginia points system and the Virginia online traffic school information can be found at the link below.
Seven years
You may get a Restricted Driver's License at the age of 16 in Washington state, and a Full, Unrestricted Driver's License at the age of 17 with a perfect driving record or at the age of 18 if you do not have a perfect driving record.
Because the cost of insurance is reletive to you, your driving record and the state you live in, You need to call your agent and ask him.
No. Your Driver's License record is running history of your driving history throughout your life and, unlike juvenile criminal offenses, does not "go away" after you turn 18.
Which record? Criminal record or driving record? For CRIMINAL RECORDS: - if they occurred prior to your 18th birthday they will disappear from the public access portion of your record automatically. If you wish, you can file a request to have your record EXPUNGED, but this takes some time and effort and must be done seperately for each individual record you want sealed. For DRIVING RECORDS: they are a running cumulative total of all your driving records since you were first issued one and run for you re entire life. It is not possible to expunge driving records.