I'd agree with screeech. They'll take a look at the situation. Doing 190 in an 60 is one thing, 151 in a 100 is another. If you haven't pulled this kind of stunt before, i'd imagine they might drop it to 49 and under. While it was still stunt driving, it wasn't enough for the police to put out a blurb for the newspapers.
Your summons is just an appearance. If they offer you anything below 50, i'd take it and run. Anything below 50 and you might not even notice an insurance increase. Anything 50 and over and you'll pay 100% on top of what you're paying now.
alexu wrote:interesting, before my friend had a trial obviously he wasnt convicted, however , while he was waiting, he had his insurance renew and so it went up.....he contacted them and they said that this is because of the license that was roadside suspended......maybe he didnt understand something or maybe I am wrong......sorry anyways if I made a mistake by writing this.....thanks lord its not my story:-) but I will call him today and ask....
Insurance providers can't raise your rates based on a 7 day administrative suspension. I'm sure some may try, but they're not allowed. You'd have to be suspended for over a year before your provider can even submit a form to the Financial Services Commission of Ontario justifying an insurance hike. Even then it's not automatic.
I've never seen an abstract with an administrative suspension, but I don't believe they reveal any details regarding why it's there. You can get an administrative suspension for a number of things, including something medical.