Auto Insurance Violations

Do you report moving violation tickets to your insurance company, if there is no conviction, just supervision?
If a driver receives one moving violation ticket during a 12 month period, pays the fine, and has court supervision, the offense is not reported on their permanent driving record, nor is the license taken.
But should this still be reported to your auto insurance company? If so, will your rates go up? What about parking tickets that are paid on time? Must those be reported.
If these things need to be reported, and they weren’t, what happens? Is insurance company automatically notified?
Also, what determines if someone must go to traffic school? I think there is no conviction if additional tickets are not accrued after 90 days not 12 months.
My opinion, I’ve been driving quite a few years, and this is my first moving violation, and I’ve only had 2 parking tickets. So your implication that I don’t take driving “seriously” is a bit extreme.
I have never reported anything to my insurance company (except of course an accident) but ticket wise…no.
If you get a ticket and it is going to affect your insurance rates they will find it. Usually when you renew your insurance every year they check your records again for anything that has changed.
Are you supposed to report tickets? I never have, and have never been told to by anyone. I doubt they would even do anything about it yet, I’m sure they would just wait until they check your records again before renewing the policy.
