In this paper, we present a geometric perspective on how to quantify the bending and the twisting of quantum curves traced by state vectors evolving under nonstationary Hamiltonians. Specifically, relying on the existing geometric viewpoint for stationary Hamiltonians, we discuss the generalization of our theoretical construct to time-dependent quantum-mechanical scenarios where both time-varying curvature and torsion coefficients play a key role. Specifically, we present a quantum version of the Frenet–Serret apparatus for a quantum trajectory in projective Hilbert space traced out by a parallel-transported pure quantum state evolving unitarily under a time-dependent Hamiltonian specifying the Schrödinger evolution equation. The time-varying curvature coefficient is specified by the magnitude squared of the covariant derivative of the tangent vector [Formula: see text] to the state vector [Formula: see text] and measures the bending of the quantum curve. The time-varying torsion coefficient, instead, is given by the magnitude squared of the projection of the covariant derivative of the tangent vector [Formula: see text] to the state vector [Formula: see text], orthogonal to [Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text] and, in addition, measures the twisting of the quantum curve. We find that the time-varying setting exhibits a richer structure from a statistical standpoint. For instance, unlike the time-independent configuration, we find that the notion of generalized variance enters nontrivially in the definition of the torsion of a curve traced out by a quantum state evolving under a nonstationary Hamiltonian. To physically illustrate the significance of our construct, we apply it to an exactly soluble time-dependent two-state Rabi problem specified by a sinusoidal oscillating time-dependent potential. In this context, we show that the analytical expressions for the curvature and torsion coefficients are completely described by only two real three-dimensional vectors, the Bloch vector that specifies the quantum system and the externally applied time-varying magnetic field. Although we show that the torsion is identically zero for an arbitrary time-dependent single-qubit Hamiltonian evolution, we study the temporal behavior of the curvature coefficient in different dynamical scenarios, including off-resonance and on-resonance regimes and, in addition, strong and weak driving configurations. While our formalism applies to pure quantum states in arbitrary dimensions, the analytic derivation of associated curvatures and orbit simulations can become quite involved as the dimension increases. Thus, finally we briefly comment on the possibility of applying our geometric formalism to higher-dimensional qudit systems that evolve unitarily under a general nonstationary Hamiltonian.