In the US the timeframe varies state by state. Some points might come off in one state but not in another. DUI convictions NEVER go away.
It won't stop you from getting a licence, but a conviction of a charge of driving on a suspended licence usually adds four points to your drivers licence. If it occurred within the last three years, four points is going to be enough to prevent you from being able to find employment as a CDL driver.
A DR40 stays on the License for 4 Years from date of offence, not date of conviction as some people may think. The penalty points are valid for three years but must remain on the License for four years before they can be removed.
No, to be suspended for infractions you must have 18 or more active points. Points stay active until 2 years after the conviction.
Any points relating to speeding offences will remain on a UK licence for 4 years from the time of the conviction. See the link below.
In Indiana, points for a moving violation stay on your record for 2 years from the date of conviction.
A record of a DUI conviction on your drivers license history is permanent.
If the conviction is 10 years old
If it was a charge, but there was never a conviction, most states have some type of expunction. If you have a felony conviction, I'm sure all states are different, but where I am, a conviction is there forever.
In Texas the first conviction is a 90 day suspension and the second means you lose your license for a year. A third conviction means you lose your license for 3 years.
11 years for drink/driving relater 4 years from conviction date for reckless/dangerous driving 4 years from offence date for all other minor offences i.e. speeding
2 points on the record of 10 yrs
In Arizona points will stay on your license for three years. Driving violations stay on a person's record for at least five years.