North Carolina: Full Rule Record
Confirm with your court or DMV. Traffic-code rules change and vary by court — verify the current rule on North Carolina’s official .gov page or with the court handling your citation before you act. This rule is compiled at medium confidence and should be confirmed before you rely on it. This page is general information, not legal advice.
North Carolina operates under a "no state program" mechanism for the purposes of this rule record. There is no published frequency associated with the rule at the statewide level, and points assessed under this rule have no statewide effect.
The state does not establish a uniform cost or course hours requirement in its public record. These variables are determined individually by approved providers and courts rather than by a single statewide standard. For authoritative details on costs, course hours, and program requirements, consultation of the state's official .gov resources is necessary. This information is provided for reference purposes and does not constitute legal advice.
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| State | North Carolina |
| Mechanism | No state program |
| What that means | no dismissal/point-reduction program (insurance discount may exist) |
| Eligibility / notes | No statewide course point-reduction; PJC (prayer for judgment continued) is a separate court mechanism. CONFIRM before ship. |
| Frequency | n/a |
| Points effect | none statewide |
| Governing statute | Not yet pinned — see source |
| Confidence | Medium |
Primary source: https://www.ncdot.gov/dmv/. Verified June 2026. How we compile this.
Check your state's rules →North Carolina overview → · Requirements →
Informational only — not legal advice. Traffic-school eligibility, point-reduction rules, and court procedures vary by state, by court, and by offense, and change over time. Nothing here is a specific statute citation or a determination about your case. Before you act, confirm the current rule with the traffic court handling your citation or your state DMV, and refer to your state’s official statutes for the governing law. For your specific situation, consult a licensed attorney.