DUI Insurance Calculator Estimate the True Cost of a DUI

DUI Insurance Calculator — See Your Real 3-Year Cost
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DUI Insurance Calculator

See your real 3-year financial impact — insurance, SR-22, legal fees, fines, and more. Results in under 60 seconds.

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0.08% (legal limit) 0.10% 0.20%+ (aggravated)
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$300 $1,200 $5,000
SR-22 Required
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Estimated total cost over 3 years
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total cost

Year-by-Year Insurance Burden
YearMonthly PremiumAnnual TotalCumulative (all costs)

Results are estimates based on state average data from NAIC and state insurance departments.
Actual rates vary by insurer, driving history, and coverage level. This is not an insurance quote.


DUI Insurance Guide

How Much Does a DUI Really Cost (2026)

A DUI conviction doesn’t just cost you a night in jail it follows your wallet for years. Here’s the full financial picture most people don’t find out until it’s too late.

📅 Updated June 2026 · ⏱ 8 min read · 🔍 Based on NAIC & state insurance data
+139%
Average national insurance rate increase after DUI
$10K+
Typical total first-year DUI cost (insurance + legal + fees)
3 yrs
Minimum years most states require SR-22 filing
+298%
Highest state rate increase (North Carolina)

How a DUI Affects Your Insurance

When you receive a DUI conviction, your insurance company is notified either through a DMV record check at renewal or because the state requires you to file an SR-22 certificate through your insurer. Either way, your insurer now classifies you as a high-risk driver, and your premium jumps accordingly.

The rate increase isn’t a penalty it’s a reflection of statistical risk. Drivers with a DUI conviction are significantly more likely to be involved in future accidents, and insurers price that risk into your premium. Most companies also run motor vehicle record checks at every renewal, so the DUI stays visible and priced in for years.

Important: Even if your current insurer doesn’t drop you after a DUI, they will raise your rates at your next renewal period. Some insurers cancel policies mid-term upon conviction check your policy terms.

What Triggers the Rate Increase

Several factors determine exactly how much your rate goes up after a DUI:

1
Your State
State regulations vary wildly. North Carolina averages a +298% increase while Maine averages only +60%. Your state’s mandatory minimums and insurer competition both play a role.
2
Your BAC Level
A standard DUI (0.08–0.12% BAC) triggers a base increase. An aggravated DUI (0.16%+) can add 15–30% on top of that, and may result in an extended SR-22 period.
3
Number of Offenses
A second DUI typically raises premiums 60–80% more than a first offense. A third DUI can push you into non-standard (assigned risk) insurance pools entirely.
4
Your Age & Driving History
Drivers under 25 face steeper increases. A clean prior record can slightly soften the blow a DUI on top of other violations compounds the rate increase.
5
Your Insurer
Not all insurers treat DUIs equally. Some (like State Farm and GEICO) are relatively forgiving on first offenses. Others may non-renew your policy entirely.

SR-22 and FR-44: What They Are & What They Cost

After a DUI, most states require you to file a financial responsibility certificate with your state’s DMV to prove you carry the minimum required insurance coverage. This certificate is filed by your insurance company on your behalf.

SR-22 (Most States)

The SR-22 is required in 48 states after a DUI. It’s not a type of insurance it’s a form your insurer files with the DMV to certify you have the required liability coverage. If your policy lapses or is cancelled, your insurer is legally required to notify the DMV immediately, which can trigger a license suspension.

The SR-22 filing fee itself is typically $25–$50 one-time, but the real cost is the premium increase required to maintain SR-22-eligible coverage. Most states require SR-22 for 3 years, though some extend this to 5 years for repeat offenders.

FR-44 (Florida & Virginia Only)

Florida and Virginia replaced the standard SR-22 with the stricter FR-44 for DUI convictions. The FR-44 requires significantly higher liability limits:

CoverageStandard MinimumFR-44 Required (FL)Increase
Bodily injury (per person)$10,000$100,00010x more
Bodily injury (per accident)$20,000$300,00015x more
Property damage$10,000$50,0005x more

Because you’re forced into much higher coverage limits, FR-44 drivers in Florida and Virginia typically see larger premium increases than SR-22 states even before accounting for the DUI surcharge itself.

Critical: If your SR-22 or FR-44 lapses even for one day your insurer notifies the DMV, your license is immediately suspended, and your SR-22 period resets from the beginning. Set up autopay to avoid this.

How Long Does a DUI Affect Your Insurance?

A DUI conviction typically affects your insurance for 3 to 10 years, depending on your state and insurer. Here’s how the timeline usually plays out:

Y1
Year 1 Maximum Impact
Rates are at their highest. SR-22/FR-44 required immediately. Some insurers may cancel your policy you’ll need to find a new insurer willing to cover high-risk drivers.
Y2–3
Years 2–3 Gradual Improvement
Rates remain elevated but may start to drop slightly as the conviction ages. SR-22 is still required. Re-shopping insurers every 12 months can save money.
Y3+
After Year 3 SR-22 Released
In most states, your SR-22 requirement ends. Your rates may drop significantly at this point. Some insurers treat you as a standard driver again; others continue to surcharge for up to 7–10 years.
Note: A DUI may stay on your driving record permanently in some states, even after it stops affecting your insurance rates. This can impact commercial driving licenses (CDL) and certain professional licenses indefinitely.

How to Lower Your Rate After a DUI

You can’t undo a DUI, but you can minimize the financial damage with the right strategies:

1. Shop Around Aggressively Every Year

This is the single most impactful action you can take. Rates for the same DUI driver can vary by $2,000–$4,000+ per year depending on the insurer. Get quotes from at least 5 companies. Use both direct insurers (State Farm, GEICO, Progressive) and independent brokers who access multiple carriers at once.

2. Take a Defensive Driving Course

Many states and insurers offer a rate discount (typically 5–10%) for completing an approved defensive driving or DUI education course. These are often the same courses mandated by the court completing them early signals responsibility to insurers.

3. Bundle Your Policies

Combining your auto insurance with homeowners, renters, or life insurance through the same carrier typically earns a 10–15% multi-policy discount. This doesn’t erase the DUI surcharge, but it applies on top of your existing rate.

4. Raise Your Deductible

Increasing your deductible from $500 to $1,000 can lower your premium by 10–20%. This works well if you have an emergency fund to cover the higher out-of-pocket cost if you do file a claim.

5. Consider Usage-Based Insurance

Programs like State Farm’s Drive Safe & Save, Progressive’s Snapshot, or GEICO’s DriveEasy track your actual driving behavior. If you’re a careful driver post-DUI, these programs can reduce your rate by 10–40% completely separate from your DUI history.

6. Maintain a Perfect Record

Any additional violations on top of a DUI compound your rate increase dramatically. Speeding tickets, at-fault accidents, or another DUI will layer additional surcharges that make an already expensive situation much worse. Drive defensively.

Best Insurance Companies for DUI Drivers (2026)

Not all insurers treat DUI convictions equally. Some are more forgiving on pricing, and others specialize in high-risk drivers. Here’s how the major carriers compare:

InsurerAvg Annual Approximately Rates (post-DUI)Best ForNotes
State Farm~$2,299Most driversLowest national avg; widely available
USAA~$1,940Military & veteransBest rates overall eligibility required
Progressive~$2,850FR-44 states; multiple violationsSpecializes in high-risk; Snapshot program
GEICO~$2,980First-time DUI, clean prior recordGood for single DUI; DriveEasy discount
Dairyland~$3,200Multiple DUIs; SR-22/FR-44High-risk specialist; available in most states
The General~$3,8003rd+ offense; license issuesLast resort for uninsurable drivers
National General~$3,500High-risk, multiple violationsAccepts most DUI drivers; SR-22 specialist
Pro tip: If you’re in a state where standard insurers won’t cover you, ask your independent insurance agent about your state’s assigned risk plan (also called the residual market). It’s more expensive, but it’s the guaranteed-issue safety net for high-risk drivers.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will my insurance company drop me after a DUI?
It depends on your insurer and state laws. Some companies will non-renew your policy at the end of your current term. Others will keep you but raise your rates significantly. Very few will cancel mid-term (which requires specific legal grounds). If you’re dropped, you’ll need to find a high-risk insurer. Most standard insurers will take you back after 3–5 years of clean driving.
Can I drive without insurance while my license is suspended?
No and you shouldn’t even try. Driving without insurance is illegal in every state and carrying a suspended license compounds the offense dramatically. Many states also require you to maintain continuous insurance coverage during suspension (to satisfy SR-22 requirements), even if you’re not driving. A gap in coverage resets your SR-22 period.
Does a DUI affect my insurance in a different state if I move?
Yes. Your driving record follows you between states through the Driver License Compact (DLC), which most states participate in. When you apply for insurance in a new state, insurers will pull your full motor vehicle record including out-of-state DUIs. Your SR-22 obligation also typically transfers you’d need to satisfy the original state’s SR-22 requirements even after moving.
What’s the difference between a DUI and a “wet reckless”?
A “wet reckless” (officially: reckless driving involving alcohol) is a lesser charge that prosecutors sometimes offer as a plea deal in DUI cases. It typically results in lower fines, shorter license suspension, and critically a much smaller insurance rate increase. While still a serious conviction, insurers surcharge wet reckless at roughly 30–50% of the rate increase for a full DUI. Hiring an attorney specifically to pursue this outcome can save thousands over 3 years.
How accurate is this DUI insurance calculator?
The calculator uses state-average rate increase data from NAIC filings and state insurance commissioner reports (2025–2026). It provides a reliable estimate of the insurance premium increase you can expect. However, actual rates vary based on your specific insurer, your full driving history, credit score (in states where it’s permitted), vehicle type, and other factors. Use the estimate as a planning tool then get actual quotes from 3–5 insurers to find your real rate.
Does a DUI affect my employer’s fleet insurance if I drive for work?
Potentially yes. Many employers run annual motor vehicle record checks on employees who drive for work. A DUI may disqualify you from driving company vehicles or raise your employer’s fleet insurance rates (which could affect your employment). Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) holders face particularly severe consequences a DUI can disqualify you from holding a CDL for 1 year (or lifetime for a second offense), effectively ending careers in trucking, delivery, or transportation.

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DUI Insurance Calculator Editorial Team
Our content is based on NAIC data, state insurance commissioner reports, and analysis of 15+ major insurer rate filings. Updated annually to reflect current state regulations and market rates.