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.
If the police came out and made a report of it then it will be on your driving record. It will be a not-at-fault accident but it will still be on your driving record. If the police did not come out but your insurance knows about it then it will be on your CLUE report and be a not-at-fault accident.
37 years
yes. it goes on your record and insurance companys look at you record from time to time
The accident will show but it will be marked as a not at fault accident and should not increase your insurance rates.
It depends. Were you also in the State of Texas when the accident happened? In most cases a rear end collision is the complete fault of the person hitting from the rear and will not affect the claimant's rates. MyInsuranceXpert
While your insurance company only cares who pays the insurance policy, the DMV doesn't care who owns the car. The driver who causes the accident will have it show up on his/her driving record (if there was a ticket issued).
naa then
bananners!
Maybe not, the accident will be 'chargeable' and the ticket also will be on your record. Contact your agent or company's policy services dept for the answer.
According to http://accident-law.freeadvice.com/auto/fault-no-fault-car-accidents.htm, Texas is one of the states which has some form of no-fault law.
Yes. One point will be added to your official driving record.
Generally speaking, no. However, in any moving incident/violation, your driving record is checked. If it turns out that you have a few past speeding tickets, and maybe another previous accident or two where you were not at fault, the insurance company may choose to tag you as a high-risk driver and increase your premium. On the other hand, if you are a driver with a spotless record, your rates will probably not go up in the event of an accident where you are not at fault.