Most likely it won't. In my town if you take the proof of renewl down to the police station you won't even have to pay for the ticket your first time. If this doesn't answer your question, then go down to the police station or call them, and ask them if they have sent the information to your insurance agent.
You have insurance and drivers license is expired can you be ticketed
tottaly the owner because it not really your sons car
The driver.
no it shouldn't
I would suggest you get the expired tags renewed as soon as possible. Depending upon your driving record and the length of time the tags have been expired, you may be ticketed and your car may be impounded if you are caught by law enforcement.
If you prove the registration in court, they will drop the charges. You will still be charged with driving on revoked license.
You can go and get your tags renewed. It is illegal to drive with expired tags and you can get pulled over and ticketed.
More than likely not, those are both minor tickets, that insurance companies usually ignore when rating your policy. Driving uninsured is a very serious crime, and I would expect your insurance rates to go up if discovered.
If you paid the fine but are still driving with the expired tags, yes you can be fined again. If you got ticketed but are waiting to pay or go to court and are ticketed again, then you need to explain to the court that you were fined sometime prior to your second ticket. Check your state's statutes or contact your local DMV/traffic court for questions.
Not usually, your insurance generally goes up when you have a moving violation.
You can't be sure with all companies...but most would not increase your premium unless it is a moving violation. However, expired registration violation, parking ticket violations, and other non-moving violation may lead to license suspension. Now, that is a complete different story. Such suspension may cause your insurance company to non-renew your policy.
No insurance company will insure you unless you have a valid drivers license. Now if you are asking if your rates would later increase if you have a conviction for this, you would have to check with your insurance company. However, that is a relatively minor violation, and in a state that uses a point system, would probably not be very many points, if any.