New York's 2026 Traffic Point System: What Suffolk County Drivers Need to Know
If you're driving on Long Island, you need to know about the major changes coming to New York's driver point system in February 2026. These aren't small tweaks – they're significant changes that could affect your license, your insurance rates, and your wallet for years to come.
License Suspension Now at Just 10 Points
The biggest change? New York is lowering the license suspension threshold from 11 points to 10 points. That might sound like a minor adjustment, but it's not. With higher point penalties for common violations, reaching 10 points will happen faster than you think.
For Suffolk County drivers who commute on busy roads like Sunrise Highway, the Southern State, or Route 25, this change makes every traffic stop more serious. A couple of speeding tickets combined with a cell phone violation could put you dangerously close to losing your license.
Points Stick Around Longer
The look-back period is extending from 18 months to 24 months. This means points from violations will count toward your total for two full years instead of a year and a half. If you got a ticket in early 2025, those points will still count toward suspension risk well into 2027.
This extended timeline makes it much easier to accumulate points from multiple violations over time. What used to be manageable spacing between tickets may no longer be enough to keep you under the suspension threshold.
Higher Point Penalties for Common Violations
New York is increasing point penalties for violations that Long Island drivers see every day:
Speeding violations will carry higher point values, especially for speeds more than 15 mph over the limit. On highways like the LIE or Northern State, where traffic often moves faster than posted limits, this change will hit hard.
Cell phone violations are getting steeper point penalties. With enforcement cameras becoming more common in Suffolk County, these violations are easier to catch and now more expensive to your driving record.
Failure to yield violations will carry more points, which matters on Long Island's complex intersection system and busy shopping areas.
School bus and construction zone violations will see dramatic point increases. With ongoing construction projects throughout Suffolk County, these penalties will affect more drivers.
What This Means for Your Insurance
Here's what many drivers don't realize: insurance companies review your driving record regularly, and points mean premium increases. With the new system making it easier to accumulate points, expect your insurance costs to climb faster and stay higher longer.
A single speeding ticket under the new system could cost you hundreds of dollars annually in increased premiums for three years – far more than the ticket itself.
Don't Just Pay That Ticket
Under the new point system, paying a traffic ticket without fighting it becomes much more expensive. When points accumulate faster and stick around longer, every violation matters more.
Before you mail in that payment, call Matt Fella at (631) 482-7808 for a free consultation. Fighting a ticket often costs less than the long-term insurance consequences of just paying it. Matt has helped hundreds of Suffolk County drivers keep points off their licenses and protect their driving privileges.
The new system goes into effect February 2026, but tickets you get now will count under these harsher rules if they're still within the 24-month look-back period when the changes take effect.
Ready to protect your license and keep your insurance rates down? Call (631) 482-7808 for a free consultation. Finally, a Fella You Can Count On.
This information is for educational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. Call for a free consultation to discuss your specific situation.
Attorney Advertising











