Well they are both only minor offenses (1 point) so going to traffic school for either/or will not make a difference.
Yes, a speeding ticket will affect your insurance rate. The good news is each insurance company has different rates. It depends on how many speeding tickets you have had, or if this is the first one. If you have a speeding ticket you may want to look into traffic school to wipe it off your record and keep your rates unaffected.
The amount that a person's insurance will go up after 2 speeding tickets varies from company to company. Typically, the rate will go up by 50 percent depending on the actual driving record.
There is no statute of limitations on speeding tickets.
speeding tickets are the most common type of traffic in new york. they provide a chart to know that in newyorktrafficticketss.com
For insurance purposes, a safe driver has no record of accidents or traffic violations (like speeding tickets). A driver who has had several accidents or tickets is a bad risk.
For insurance purposes, a safe driver has no record of accidents or traffic violations (like speeding tickets). A driver who has had several accidents or tickets is a bad risk.
60 percent
It depends on which state the charges are in.
YES.....the carpool ticket is considered a regular moving violation like a speeding ticket of any other moving violation.
No it does not.
Speeding tickets and minor traffic violations in the state of Minnesota will stay on your record for 5 years. Major traffic violations will stay on your record longer.
Because driving above the speed limit is a traffic violation