SR22 Insurance by State: Requirements, Costs & Filing Rules (All 50 States)

SR22 Insurance by State: Requirements, Costs & Filing Rules (All 50 States)

Why SR22 Rules Vary So Much by State

If you search “how long do I need SR22” and get a different answer from every source you find, there is a simple explanation: SR22 is entirely state-regulated. There is no federal SR22 law. Every state sets its own rules — who must file, how long they must maintain coverage, what minimum insurance limits apply, how much reinstatement costs, and what happens if coverage lapses. This means a first DUI in Texas requires 2 years of SR22 while the same offense in California requires 3 years with a clock-reset lapse policy. Florida requires FR44 instead of SR22 for DUI entirely. New York and North Carolina use different certificate systems altogether.

This guide covers all 50 states in detail — the exact requirements, average costs, filing durations, reinstatement fees, and special rules for each. Whether you are starting your SR22 process, moving to a new state, or just trying to understand what applies in your specific situation, the information you need is in this guide. For the complete overview of how SR22 works in general, see our ultimate guide to SR22 insurance.

The Key Variables That Differ State to State

SR22 requirement duration: Ranges from 1 year (some minor violations in select states) to 5 years (second DUI in many states) to permanent revocation in extreme cases. Most first violations require 2 to 3 years.

Minimum liability limits: States set different minimum coverage requirements. Florida requires $10k/$20k/$10k for standard violations but $100k/$300k/$50k for FR44 DUI. California requires 15/30/5. Texas requires 30/60/25. These minimums directly affect your premium.

Lapse consequences: California resets the entire SR22 clock on any lapse. Most states pause rather than reset. Some states add additional fines for lapse. The financial consequences of a missed payment vary enormously by state.

Certificate type: 48 states use SR22. Florida and Virginia use FR44 for DUI (higher coverage requirements). Indiana uses SR50 in addition to SR22. Delaware and a handful of others use state-specific forms.

Reinstatement fees: Range from $40 in Ohio to $500+ in Illinois. Some states charge multiple fees for different violation types.

Credit rating: California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, and Michigan prohibit insurers from using credit scores in pricing. All other states allow it, meaning credit improvement is a viable cost strategy in 46 states but not these four.

Moving states: Your original state’s SR22 requirement follows you when you move. Your new state may impose its own additional requirement for the same offense. The Driver License Compact connects most states’ records — ignoring an original state requirement after moving creates license problems in your new state. Full details in the moving section below.

Quick-View: All 50 States SR22 Comparison Table

The table below covers every U.S. state. Average monthly costs are for minimum liability SR22 coverage for a first DUI offense at age 30–35 with no other violations — actual costs vary based on your specific profile and insurer. Always get multiple quotes. Full state-by-state details are in the regional sections below.

State SR22 Required? DUI Duration Avg Monthly Cost Min Liability Non-Owner? FR-44?
Alabama Yes 3 years $195–$365 25/50/25 Yes No
Alaska Yes 3 years $215–$390 50/100/25 Yes No
Arizona Yes 3 years $198–$372 25/50/15 Yes No
Arkansas Yes 3 years $185–$345 25/50/25 Yes No
California Yes 3 years* $275–$510 15/30/5 Yes No
Colorado Yes 3 years $205–$385 25/50/15 Yes No
Connecticut Yes 3 years $242–$455 25/50/25 Yes No
Delaware Alt. form 3 years $228–$418 25/50/10 Yes No
Florida SR22 + FR44 3 years (FR44) $265–$505 10/20/10 (SR22) / 100/300/50 (FR44) Yes YES
Georgia Yes 3 years $218–$415 25/50/25 Yes No
Hawaii Yes 3 years $235–$428 20/40/10 Yes No
Idaho Yes 3 years $178–$328 25/50/15 Yes No
Illinois Yes 3 years $235–$445 25/50/20 Yes No
Indiana SR22 + SR50 3 years $195–$368 25/50/25 Yes No
Iowa Yes 2 years $182–$338 20/40/15 Yes No
Kansas Yes 3 years $188–$352 25/50/25 Yes No
Kentucky Yes 3 years $192–$358 25/50/25 Yes No
Louisiana Yes 3 years $245–$465 15/30/25 Yes No
Maine Yes 3 years $192–$355 50/100/25 Yes No
Maryland Yes 3 years $228–$428 30/60/15 Yes No
Massachusetts Yes 3 years $238–$448 20/40/5 Yes No
Michigan Yes 3 years $275–$520 50/100/10 Yes No
Minnesota Yes 3 years $198–$372 30/60/10 Yes No
Mississippi Yes 3 years $188–$352 25/50/25 Yes No
Missouri Yes 2 years $192–$358 25/50/25 Yes No
Montana Yes 3 years $188–$348 25/50/20 Yes No
Nebraska Yes 3 years $185–$345 25/50/25 Yes No
Nevada Yes 3 years $238–$445 25/50/20 Yes No
New Hampshire Yes 3 years $205–$382 25/50/25 Yes No
New Jersey Yes 3 years $248–$468 15/30/5 Yes No
New Mexico Yes 3 years $192–$358 25/50/10 Yes No
New York Yes 3 years $252–$478 25/50/10 Yes No
North Carolina Yes (DL-123) 3 years $205–$385 30/60/25 Yes No
North Dakota Yes 3 years $182–$342 25/50/25 Yes No
Ohio Yes 3 years $192–$362 25/50/25 Yes No
Oklahoma Yes 3 years $192–$358 25/50/25 Yes No
Oregon Yes 3 years $208–$388 25/50/20 Yes No
Pennsylvania Yes 3 years $225–$422 15/30/5 Yes No
Rhode Island Yes 3 years $245–$460 25/50/25 Yes No
South Carolina Yes 3 years $205–$385 25/50/25 Yes No
South Dakota Yes 3 years $182–$345 25/50/25 Yes No
Tennessee Yes 3 years $198–$372 25/50/15 Yes No
Texas Yes 2 years $210–$398 30/60/25 Yes No
Utah Yes 3 years $192–$362 25/65/15 Yes No
Vermont Yes 3 years $195–$365 25/50/10 Yes No
Virginia SR22 + FR44 3 years (FR44) $235–$475 30/60/20 (SR22) / 50/100/40 (FR44) Yes YES
Washington Yes 3 years $218–$408 25/50/10 Yes No
West Virginia Yes 3 years $192–$358 25/50/25 Yes No
Wisconsin Yes 3 years $185–$348 25/50/10 Yes No
Wyoming Yes 3 years $182–$340 25/50/20 Yes No

*California clock resets to zero on any coverage lapse. Min liability shown as BI per person / BI per accident / PD. Costs are estimates for first DUI at age 30–35; individual rates vary. Always confirm requirements directly with your state DMV.

Western States — SR22 Requirements

🏠 California SR22 Requirements (2026)

California is the most expensive and strictest SR22 state. The 10-year DUI record retention and clock-reset lapse policy make compliance mistakes especially costly. Credit scoring is prohibited in insurance pricing (Prop. 103), so California drivers cannot use credit improvement as a cost-reduction strategy.

Minimum Liability 15/30/5 ($15k/$30k/$5k)
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years (clock resets to zero on any lapse)
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $275–$510
Reinstatement Fee $55–$125 depending on violation
IID Required (DUI)? Yes — mandatory for most DUI convictions
Non-Owner SR22? Yes — available, avg $78–$185/mo
Special Notes No credit scoring in pricing; 10-year DUI record retention; lapse resets clock to zero; DUI school mandatory

Full details: California SR22 Guide

🏠 Arizona SR22 Requirements (2026)

Arizona requires SR22 for DUI, reckless driving, and uninsured driving violations. Arizona has mandatory IID requirements for all DUI convictions and a relatively aggressive enforcement posture on SR22 compliance. Arizona credit scoring is permitted in insurance pricing.

Minimum Liability 25/50/15
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $198–$372
Reinstatement Fee $10–$25
IID Required (DUI)? Yes — all DUI convictions
Non-Owner SR22? Yes — available

🏠 Nevada SR22 Requirements (2026)

Nevada requires SR22 for DUI, reckless driving, and driving without insurance. Nevada’s insurance market is competitive, and rates are moderate for the region. Las Vegas’s urban density means slightly higher claims frequency and base rates than rural Nevada.

Minimum Liability 25/50/20
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $238–$445
Reinstatement Fee $60–$120
Non-Owner SR22? Yes — available

🏠 Washington State SR22 Requirements (2026)

Washington requires SR22 for DUI, reckless driving, driving without insurance, and habitual traffic violations. Washington uses the term “DUI” for alcohol impairment and has separate provisions for drug impairment. IID is required for most DUI convictions in Washington.

Minimum Liability 25/50/10
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $218–$408
Reinstatement Fee $75
Non-Owner SR22? Yes — available

🏠 Oregon SR22 Requirements (2026)

Minimum Liability 25/50/20
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $208–$388
Reinstatement Fee $75–$145
Non-Owner SR22? Yes — available

🏠 Colorado, Idaho, Utah, Montana, Wyoming, Alaska, Hawaii

All six states follow the standard 3-year SR22 requirement for first DUI. Key distinctions:

Colorado: 25/50/15 minimums. Avg DUI cost $205–$385/mo. Reinstatement $95. IID required for DUI.

Idaho: One of the cheapest western states. Avg DUI cost $178–$328/mo. Reinstatement $60. 25/50/15 minimums.

Utah: Zero tolerance DUI state (0.05 BAC limit, lowest in U.S.). 25/65/15 minimums. Avg DUI cost $192–$362/mo.

Montana: 25/50/20 minimums. Avg DUI cost $188–$348/mo. Reinstatement $100. Rural state; fewer insurer options in some areas.

Wyoming: 25/50/20 minimums. Among the lowest-cost western states. Avg DUI cost $182–$340/mo.

Alaska: High minimum limits (50/100/25) push base premiums up despite low population. Avg DUI cost $215–$390/mo. Limited insurer options in remote areas.

Hawaii: Credit scoring prohibited (like CA). 20/40/10 minimums. Avg DUI cost $235–$428/mo. No-fault PIP state. Reinstatement $25.

Midwest States — SR22 Requirements

🏠 Illinois SR22 Requirements (2026)

Illinois has one of the highest DUI reinstatement fees in the country at $500. It also triggers SR22 quickly for point accumulation — just 3 violations in 12 months results in suspension. Illinois DUI requirements are comprehensive: alcohol evaluation, DUI school, reinstatement hearing, and SR22 are all typically required before reinstatement.

Minimum Liability 25/50/20
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years (first) / 5 years (second)
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $235–$445
DUI Reinstatement Fee $500 (highest among major states)
Point Accumulation Trigger 3 violations/12 mo, 5/24 mo, or 7/36 mo
Non-Owner SR22? Yes
Special Notes Mandatory alcohol evaluation; DUI hearing required; IID common for DUI

Full details: Illinois SR22 Guide

🏠 Ohio SR22 Requirements (2026)

Ohio is consistently one of the most affordable SR22 states. The $40 reinstatement fee is the lowest among major states. Insurance rates are also among the most competitive nationally. Ohio’s SR22 market has strong participation from major insurers, keeping prices competitive.

Minimum Liability 25/50/25
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $192–$362
Reinstatement Fee $40 (lowest among major states)
Non-Owner SR22? Yes

Full details: Ohio SR22 Guide

🏠 Michigan SR22 Requirements (2026)

Michigan has the highest SR22 insurance costs in the country. This is primarily driven by Michigan’s unique unlimited personal injury protection (PIP) requirement, which historically has made all Michigan auto insurance expensive. Michigan prohibits credit scoring in insurance pricing (like California and Hawaii). The state’s reform laws have reduced some PIP costs in recent years but Michigan SR22 rates remain the highest nationally.

Minimum Liability 50/100/10
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $275–$520 (highest nationally)
Credit Scoring? Prohibited
Special Notes PIP required; very high base insurance costs; no credit pricing

🏠 Indiana, Iowa, Missouri, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Kansas, Nebraska, North/South Dakota

The remaining Midwest states are among the most affordable SR22 markets nationally. Key distinctions:

Indiana: Requires both SR22 and SR50 (proof of current insurance) for reinstatement. 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $195–$368/mo.

Iowa: Only 2-year DUI requirement (same as TX and MO). 20/40/15 minimums. Avg $182–$338/mo. One of the most affordable states.

Missouri: 2-year requirement for DUI — shorter than most states. 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $192–$358/mo. Uses “DWI” terminology.

Minnesota: 30/60/10 minimums. Avg $198–$372/mo. Minnesota has a strong DUI enforcement culture and IID is commonly required.

Wisconsin: Among the cheapest Midwest states. 25/50/10 minimums. Avg $185–$348/mo. Wisconsin uses “OWI” terminology.

Kansas: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $188–$352/mo. Reinstatement fee $100.

Nebraska: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $185–$345/mo. Reinstatement $125.

North Dakota: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $182–$342/mo. Rural state with competitive insurer options.

South Dakota: One of the cheapest SR22 states in the country. Avg $182–$345/mo. 25/50/25 minimums. Low population density keeps claims frequency low and rates competitive.

Southern States — SR22 Requirements

🏠 Texas SR22 Requirements (2026)

Texas requires SR22 for DWI (DUI), reckless driving, driving without insurance, and habitual violators. Texas uses “DWI” (Driving While Intoxicated) instead of DUI. The 2-year filing requirement for most violations is shorter than the national 3-year standard, saving drivers one full year of SR22 premium. Texas uses SR22A for repeat uninsured drivers, requiring full annual premium upfront.

Minimum Liability 30/60/25
DWI SR22 Duration 2 years (shorter than most states)
Average Monthly Cost (DWI) $210–$398
Reinstatement Fee $100–$250 depending on violation history
SR22A? Yes — for repeat uninsured drivers; full annual premium required upfront
Non-Owner SR22? Yes
Special Notes 10-year DWI record retention; IID required for most DWI; “DWI” not “DUI”

Full details: Texas SR22 Guide

🏠 Florida SR22 and FR44 Requirements (2026)

Important: Florida uses FR44 — not SR22 — for DUI convictions. FR44 requires much higher minimum liability limits ($100k/$300k/$50k) and produces significantly higher premiums. Non-DUI violations (uninsured driving, reckless driving, points) use standard SR22. If you had a DUI in Florida, confirm you need FR44 before purchasing any policy. Buying SR22 when FR44 is required will not satisfy your legal obligation.

Florida is also a no-fault state requiring Personal Injury Protection (PIP). All drivers must carry PIP, which adds to the base premium cost. The combination of FR44 high limits, DUI surcharge, and PIP requirement makes Florida DUI SR22/FR44 among the most expensive in the country.

Certificate Type (DUI) FR44 — NOT SR22
FR44 Min Liability (DUI) $100k/$300k/$50k BI/BI/PD
SR22 Min Liability (non-DUI) 10/20/10
DUI FR44 Duration 3 years (first) / 5 years (second)
Average Monthly Cost (FR44 DUI) $265–$505
Reinstatement Fee $45–$150 depending on violation
Special Notes No-fault PIP state; FR44 for all DUI; very high DUI insurance costs

Full details: Florida SR22 and FR44 Guide

🏠 Georgia SR22 Requirements (2026)

Georgia requires SR22 for DUI, reckless driving, driving without insurance, and habitual violators. Georgia uses SR22A for repeat uninsured drivers — requiring full annual premium upfront, same as Texas. IID is mandatory for DUI with BAC at or above the per se limit.

Minimum Liability 25/50/25
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $218–$415
Reinstatement Fee $210
SR22A? Yes — for repeat uninsured drivers
Non-Owner SR22? Yes

Full details: Georgia SR22 Guide

🏠 Virginia SR22 and FR44 Requirements (2026)

Important: Like Florida, Virginia requires FR44 for DUI convictions — not SR22. Virginia’s FR44 minimum limits are $50k/$100k/$40k (lower than Florida’s but significantly higher than standard SR22 minimums). Non-DUI violations in Virginia use standard SR22. Confirm which certificate you need with the Virginia DMV before purchasing.

Certificate Type (DUI) FR44 — NOT SR22
FR44 Min Liability (DUI) $50k/$100k/$40k
SR22 Min Liability (non-DUI) 30/60/20
FR44 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (FR44 DUI) $235–$475

🏠 Alabama, Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma, West Virginia, Kentucky, Maryland

All follow standard 3-year SR22 requirement for first DUI. Key distinctions:

Alabama: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $195–$365/mo. SR22 required for DUI, points, and uninsured driving. Reinstatement $175.

Tennessee: 25/50/15 minimums. Avg $198–$372/mo. IID mandatory for DUI. Reinstatement $65–$250.

South Carolina: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $205–$385/mo. Reinstatement $100. SR22 required for uninsured driving even without suspension in some cases.

North Carolina: Uses DL-123 form alongside SR22. 30/60/25 minimums (highest minimum liability in South). Avg $205–$385/mo. Reinstatement $50–$130.

Mississippi: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $188–$352/mo. Among the cheapest southern states. Reinstatement $25.

Louisiana: One of the more expensive southern states. 15/30/25 minimums. Avg $245–$465/mo due to high litigation environment. Reinstatement $60–$150.

Arkansas: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $185–$345/mo. Among the most affordable states in the region.

Oklahoma: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $192–$358/mo. Reinstatement $96.

West Virginia: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $192–$358/mo. IID required for DUI. Reinstatement $50–$200.

Kentucky: No-fault PIP state. 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $192–$358/mo. Reinstatement $40.

Maryland: 30/60/15 minimums. Avg $228–$428/mo. Baltimore area drives up state average. Reinstatement $45.

Northeastern States — SR22 Requirements

Northeastern states tend to have higher baseline insurance costs due to population density, litigation environments, and higher minimum coverage requirements in some states. All northeastern states use standard SR22 with the exception of New York, which has additional administrative requirements. Massachusetts and New Hampshire prohibit credit scoring in insurance pricing.

🏠 New York SR22 Requirements (2026)

New York requires SR22 for DUI/DWI (New York uses “DWI” terminology), driving without insurance, and reckless driving. New York has one of the more complex DUI reinstatement processes — requiring a Department of Motor Vehicles hearing in addition to SR22 and other requirements. New York City area drivers pay significantly more than upstate drivers for the same coverage due to traffic density and claims frequency.

Minimum Liability 25/50/10
DWI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DWI) $252–$478
Reinstatement Fee $25–$50 (plus potential DMV hearing fee)
Special Notes NYC area dramatically more expensive than upstate; DMV hearing required for DWI; no-fault PIP state
Non-Owner SR22? Yes

🏠 New Jersey SR22 Requirements (2026)

New Jersey is among the most expensive states for all auto insurance — SR22 included. New Jersey is a no-fault state requiring PIP. The state’s minimum liability limits are relatively low (15/30/5) but the base cost of all insurance is high due to population density and litigation environment. New Jersey uses the standard SR22 process.

Minimum Liability 15/30/5
DUI SR22 Duration 3 years
Average Monthly Cost (DUI) $248–$468
Special Notes No-fault PIP state; high baseline insurance costs; urban density premium

🏠 Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, Delaware

Pennsylvania: 15/30/5 minimums. Avg $225–$422/mo. No-fault state (PIP required). SR22 required for DUI and uninsured driving. Reinstatement $88.

Connecticut: 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $242–$455/mo. Among the more expensive northeastern states. Reinstatement $175.

Massachusetts: Credit scoring prohibited. 20/40/5 minimums. Avg $238–$448/mo. Massachusetts uses “OUI” (Operating Under the Influence) instead of DUI. Complex OUI reinstatement process requiring hearings and alcohol programs.

Rhode Island: Among smallest states but high insurance costs. 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $245–$460/mo. Reinstatement $50–$100.

New Hampshire: Unique status — NH is one of the few states that does not require auto insurance by law (though it does require proof of financial responsibility if requested). SR22 is used for high-risk drivers when required. Credit scoring restrictions apply. 25/50/25 minimums. Avg $205–$382/mo.

Vermont: 25/50/10 minimums. Avg $195–$365/mo. Among the more affordable northeastern states due to low population density.

Maine: One of the highest minimum liability requirements in the country — 50/100/25. This makes minimum liability policies more expensive than states with lower limits. Avg $192–$355/mo. Maine uses “OUI” terminology.

Delaware: Uses a state-specific financial responsibility certificate rather than standard SR22 form — but it functions identically. 25/50/10 minimums. Avg $228–$418/mo. Insurers licensed in Delaware file the appropriate Delaware form. Reinstatement $25.

States That Use Alternatives to SR22

A common question is whether all states require SR22. The answer is nuanced: all states have a high-risk driver financial responsibility requirement — but not all states use the standard SR22 certificate form to satisfy it. A small number of states use alternative forms or processes that function identically to SR22 but under different designations. Understanding which form your state requires prevents the costly mistake of purchasing the wrong certificate.

Florida and Virginia — FR44 for DUI

As covered in the state sections above, Florida and Virginia require FR44 for DUI convictions. FR44 is not a separate type of insurance — it is a certificate filed by your insurer with the state, exactly like SR22 — but it certifies higher minimum liability limits. Florida requires $100k/$300k/$50k; Virginia requires $50k/$100k/$40k. Both states use standard SR22 for non-DUI violations (uninsured driving, reckless driving, points). If you had a DUI in Florida or Virginia, you need FR44. Every other violation type uses SR22.

North Carolina — DL-123

North Carolina uses a DL-123 certificate (also called a Certificate of Insurance) as proof of financial responsibility, which serves the same purpose as SR22. Many insurers who operate in North Carolina can file DL-123, and the process is identical — the insurer files on your behalf and reports any lapse. Drivers receiving a DL-123 requirement should confirm that their chosen insurer can file this form specifically in North Carolina. Standard SR22 filing does not automatically satisfy the DL-123 requirement in North Carolina.

Indiana — SR50 in Addition to SR22

Indiana requires both SR22 and SR50. The SR22 is the standard certificate of financial responsibility. The SR50 is a separate form — Proof of Current Insurance — that confirms your coverage is currently active (not just that it was active when SR22 was filed). Both forms must be filed for full Indiana compliance. An insurer licensed in Indiana should be able to file both simultaneously.

Delaware — State-Specific Financial Responsibility Certificate

Delaware uses its own financial responsibility certificate form rather than the standard SR22. The function is identical — the insurer certifies coverage and reports lapses — but the form number differs. Any insurer licensed in Delaware can file the appropriate certificate. For out-of-state drivers with Delaware requirements, confirm that your insurer can file Delaware’s specific form.

The Bottom Line on Alternative Forms

In every U.S. state, there is a formal mechanism requiring high-risk drivers to prove and maintain minimum insurance coverage — with automatic government notification if coverage lapses. The form it takes differs by state, but the mechanism and its consequences are consistent. Always confirm your exact requirement type with your state DMV before purchasing any policy. Tell each insurer exactly which form you need filed, and confirm they can file it in your specific state.

Moving Between States With SR22

Moving states during an SR22 requirement is one of the most misunderstood situations in all of SR22. Many drivers assume that moving to a new state ends or pauses their original state’s obligation. It does not. Here is exactly how each scenario works.

Scenario 1 — Moving From an SR22 State to Another SR22 State

Your original state’s SR22 obligation continues in full after you move. The clock keeps running from the original suspension date. You must maintain SR22 filing with your original state for the duration of that state’s requirement — regardless of where you now live. Additionally, your new state may impose its own SR22 requirement for the same offense if it falls within their triggering criteria, requiring you to satisfy both states simultaneously.

To handle this correctly: you need an insurer who can provide coverage in your new state of residence and file SR22 with your original state’s DMV. National insurers — Progressive, GEICO, Dairyland, National General — typically can do both. Ask explicitly: “I live in [new state] but need SR22 filed with [original state]. Can you provide coverage here and file the certificate there?” Get confirmation in writing.

Scenario 2 — Moving From an SR22 State to a Non-Standard State (FL, VA)

If you had a DUI in a standard SR22 state and move to Florida or Virginia, your original state’s SR22 requirement continues. Florida and Virginia require FR44 for their own residents with DUI convictions. If your original state required SR22 for the DUI, you maintain that filing. If you also get a Florida or Virginia driver’s license and Florida/Virginia independently identifies the DUI in your record, they may impose their FR44 requirement on top. Contact both state DMVs to understand all applicable requirements.

Scenario 3 — Moving From Florida or Virginia (FR44) to Another State

If you have an FR44 requirement in Florida or Virginia and move to another state, the FR44 obligation continues for the full Florida/Virginia requirement period. Your new state issues you a driver’s license and may independently evaluate your record. The original state’s FR44 filing must be maintained even though you no longer live there. Find an insurer who can file FR44 with Florida or Virginia while providing standard coverage in your new state.

Scenario 4 — Military Relocation

Military service members who receive Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders face a version of this problem under time pressure and often without warning. Some states accommodate military relocation by pausing the SR22 clock during overseas deployment; others do not. The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) provides some protections but does not specifically address SR22 requirements. Before deployment or PCS, contact your original state DMV and your military branch’s JAG (legal assistance) office to understand your specific obligations. Ignoring the original state SR22 requirement while deployed creates compliance gaps that require resolution upon return.

What Happens If You Ignore the Original State After Moving

Drivers who move and simply stop maintaining their original state’s SR22 create a compliance gap that becomes a licensing problem — often years later when they least expect it. Under the Driver License Compact (45 states plus DC), states share driver status information. When your original state re-suspends your license due to SR22 lapse, your new state receives notification. Your new state license may be blocked from renewal, or your new state may place a hold on your driving privileges until the original state’s requirements are resolved. Drivers have been unable to renew their new state license due to a forgotten suspension from a state they lived in 8 years earlier. Resolve original state obligations fully before or during the move — not years later when the consequences surface.

Step-by-Step Guide for Moving States With SR22

Step 1: Before moving, confirm your original state’s SR22 end date in writing from the DMV.

Step 2: Contact your current insurer and ask if they can continue filing SR22 with your original state while providing coverage in your new state. If yes, confirm in writing. If no, find a replacement insurer who can do both before you move.

Step 3: After moving, contact your new state DMV and ask whether your original state violation creates any independent requirement in the new state.

Step 4: Continue monitoring your original state DMV record online or by phone quarterly to confirm SR22 remains active in their system.

Step 5: When the original state’s requirement ends, request removal from your insurer and confirm the SR26 is filed with the original state — even if you no longer live there.

Cheapest vs Most Expensive SR22 States

Where you live is one of the largest factors in your total SR22 cost. A driver in South Dakota might pay $182 per month for the same coverage that costs a Michigan driver $520 — a difference of $338 per month, or $12,168 over a 3-year requirement period. While you cannot change your state, understanding where your state falls helps set realistic expectations and underscores why shopping among insurers is critical.

Most Expensive SR22 States — First DUI, Minimum Liability

Rank State Avg Monthly (DUI) Primary Cost Driver
1 Michigan $275–$520 Unlimited PIP requirement; no credit scoring; high litigation
2 California $275–$510 No credit scoring; 10-year retention; high base costs; urban density
3 Florida (FR44) $265–$505 FR44 high coverage limits; PIP; high litigation environment
4 New York $252–$478 NYC density; no-fault PIP; high litigation
5 New Jersey $248–$468 Dense urban market; no-fault PIP; high overall insurance costs
6 Louisiana $245–$465 Highest litigation rate in U.S.; frequent weather claims; uninsured driver rate
7 Illinois $235–$445 Chicago density; $500 DUI reinstatement fee; comprehensive DUI process

Cheapest SR22 States — First DUI, Minimum Liability

Rank State Avg Monthly (DUI) Why It’s Cheap
1 South Dakota $182–$345 Low population density; low claims frequency; low litigation rate
2 Wyoming $182–$340 Very low population; low claims frequency; rural driving patterns
3 Iowa $182–$338 2-year requirement (shorter); low base rates; rural state
4 North Dakota $182–$342 Low population; low claims frequency; competitive rural market
5 Idaho $178–$328 Low base rates; competitive market; low litigation rate
6 Ohio $192–$362 $40 reinstatement fee; highly competitive insurer market; moderate base rates

What Drives State Cost Differences

Population density: More cars in a smaller area means more accidents per mile driven. Michigan, New York, New Jersey, and California all have high-density urban cores that drive claims frequency up statewide.

Litigation environment: States with more plaintiff-friendly personal injury law and higher jury verdict awards produce higher claims costs for insurers, which translates to higher premiums. Louisiana consistently ranks among the most expensive due to its litigation culture.

No-fault PIP requirement: States that require Personal Injury Protection add mandatory coverage that increases all policies’ base cost. Florida, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and others have this requirement.

Credit scoring prohibition: California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, and Michigan prohibit using credit in pricing. This removes a competitive pricing tool that benefits drivers with improving credit in other states.

Minimum coverage requirements: States with higher minimum liability limits have higher-cost policies at the minimum level. Maine’s 50/100/25 minimums cost more than California’s 15/30/5 for the same driver.

Insurer competition: States with more insurers competing for SR22 business have lower prices. Rural, less-populous states sometimes have fewer competing insurers, which can push prices up despite lower base claims rates.

DUI-Specific SR22 Requirements by State

DUI is the most common SR22 trigger and produces the highest insurance costs. Below is the DUI-specific SR22 data for all 50 states — filing duration, IID requirements, FR44 status, and notable penalties. For the complete DUI SR22 guide covering all costs and the full reinstatement process, see our SR22 after DUI guide.

State DUI Term Used 1st DUI Filing IID Required? FR-44? Key Extra Requirement
Alabama DUI 3 years Yes (BAC 0.15+) No DUI school required
Alaska DUI 3 years Yes No Alcohol treatment program
Arizona DUI 3 years Yes — all DUI No Traffic survival school
Arkansas DWI 3 years Yes (BAC 0.15+ or repeat) No Alcohol education required
California DUI 3 years* Yes — most DUI No DUI school; clock resets on lapse
Colorado DUI/DWAI 3 years Yes No Level I education; therapy possible
Connecticut DUI/OUI 3 years Yes No Alcohol education; DMV hearing
Florida DUI 3 years Yes (BAC 0.15+ or repeat) YES — FR44 DUI school; substance abuse eval
Georgia DUI 3 years Yes No DUI school; risk reduction program
Illinois DUI 3 years Yes No $500 reinstatement fee; hearing required
Indiana OWI 3 years Yes (BAC 0.15+ or repeat) No SR22 + SR50 both required
Iowa OWI 2 years Yes No Substance abuse evaluation
Louisiana DWI 3 years Yes No Substance abuse treatment
Massachusetts OUI 3 years Yes (24D program) No 24D disposition; no credit scoring
Michigan OWI 3 years Yes No No credit scoring; highest premiums nationally
Missouri DWI 2 years Yes (BAC 0.15+) No SATOP completion required
New York DWI 3 years Yes — all DWI No DMV hearing; DDP program
Ohio OVI 3 years Yes (BAC 0.17+) No $40 reinstatement; most affordable
Texas DWI 2 years Yes No 10-year record retention
Virginia DUI 3 years Yes YES — FR44 ASAP program; court fine
Washington DUI 3 years Yes — all DUI No DOL hearing; substance eval
Wisconsin OWI 3 years Yes (2nd+ OWI) No AODA evaluation; affordable rates

Table shows major states. All other states follow standard 3-year SR22 DUI requirement unless noted. Confirm IID and additional requirements with your state DMV as laws change.

Non-Owner SR22 Availability by State

Non-owner SR22 insurance is available in all 50 states, but with some state-specific nuances in how it works and which insurers offer it. A non-owner SR22 policy provides liability coverage when driving vehicles you do not own — borrowed cars, rentals, occasional use of a family member’s vehicle — with the SR22 certificate attached. It satisfies SR22 requirements without the higher cost of an owner policy tied to a specific vehicle.

Who Should Use Non-Owner SR22

Drivers who have sold their vehicle: If you no longer own a car, there is no reason to pay for an owner policy. Non-owner SR22 satisfies your requirement for $62 to $215 per month versus $165 to $510 for an owner policy.

Urban residents using public transit primarily: Drivers who live in cities with good public transit and only occasionally need to borrow or rent a car during the SR22 period.

Drivers living with family: If you drive a family member’s vehicle occasionally but do not own the vehicle yourself, non-owner SR22 may be appropriate — though confirm whether the family member’s insurer expects you to be listed on their policy.

Drivers between vehicles: If you plan to buy a vehicle mid-SR22 period, non-owner SR22 handles compliance until purchase — at which point you switch to an owner policy.

Non-Owner SR22 Cost Comparison by State

State Owner SR22 (DUI, min liability) Non-Owner SR22 (DUI) Monthly Savings
California $275–$510 $98–$195 $177–$315/mo saved
Texas $210–$398 $75–$155 $135–$243/mo saved
Florida (FR44) $265–$505 $105–$215 $160–$290/mo saved
Illinois $235–$445 $82–$172 $153–$273/mo saved
Georgia $218–$415 $78–$158 $140–$257/mo saved
Ohio $192–$362 $62–$135 $130–$227/mo saved

Over a 36-month requirement period, the savings from choosing a non-owner policy when appropriate range from $4,680 to $11,340 depending on state and violation type — one of the single largest cost decisions available to drivers without a vehicle. For the complete non-owner SR22 guide including all state requirements and which insurers offer it, see our non-owner SR22 complete guide.

State-Specific Non-Owner SR22 Notes

Florida FR44 non-owner: Non-owner FR44 is available but must still meet the $100k/$300k/$50k minimum liability requirements — so the cost savings are smaller than in SR22 states, though still significant versus owner FR44.

North Carolina DL-123: Non-owner policies are available for DL-123 compliance in North Carolina. Fewer insurers offer this combination — confirm availability before assuming you can get a non-owner DL-123 policy.

Indiana SR50 + SR22: Non-owner policies in Indiana must satisfy both the SR22 and SR50 requirements. Confirm with your insurer that both are filed.

Michigan: Non-owner SR22 is available in Michigan but must include minimum PIP coverage due to Michigan’s mandatory no-fault requirement. This makes Michigan non-owner policies more expensive than in other states — but still significantly cheaper than owner policies.

Frequently Asked Questions — SR22 by State

General State Questions

Is SR22 federal or state regulated?

SR22 is entirely state regulated. There is no federal SR22 law. Each state independently sets who must file, for how long, what coverage minimums apply, and what happens on lapse. This is why requirements vary so significantly from state to state. The only federal element is the Driver License Compact, which enables states to share driver record information across state lines.

Which states do not require SR22?

All 50 states have a financial responsibility requirement for high-risk drivers — but not all use the standard SR22 form. Florida and Virginia use FR44 for DUI. North Carolina uses DL-123. Indiana uses SR50 in addition to SR22. Delaware uses a state-specific form. In every state, there is a mechanism requiring ongoing proof of insurance from high-risk drivers with automatic government notification on lapse.

Which state has the cheapest SR22 insurance?

South Dakota, Wyoming, Idaho, and Iowa consistently have the lowest SR22 insurance costs nationally — with first DUI monthly rates starting around $178 to $182. Ohio is the cheapest major-population state at $192 to $362 per month for DUI and a $40 reinstatement fee. Iowa and Missouri also benefit from a 2-year requirement instead of the standard 3 years, reducing total cost despite mid-range premiums.

Which state has the most expensive SR22 insurance?

Michigan is the most expensive SR22 state nationally — with DUI monthly rates of $275 to $520 driven by mandatory unlimited PIP coverage and credit scoring prohibition. California and Florida are the second and third most expensive. Louisiana rounds out the most expensive group due to its litigation environment.

Can I transfer my SR22 to another state if I move?

No. SR22 does not transfer between states. Your original state’s requirement continues after you move — your insurer must continue filing SR22 with the original state. You need an insurer who can provide coverage in your new state while maintaining the original state filing. National insurers like Progressive, GEICO, and Dairyland can typically handle this. Your new state may also impose its own independent requirement for the same offense.

How long is SR22 required in Texas?

Texas requires SR22 for 2 years for most violations, including first DWI and driving without insurance. This is one of the shorter requirements nationally — most states require 3 years. Texas uses “DWI” (Driving While Intoxicated) rather than “DUI.” Texas also uses SR22A for repeat uninsured drivers, requiring full annual premium paid upfront.

Does California require SR22 for DUI?

Yes. California requires SR22 for DUI and most other serious violations. California’s SR22 requirement is 3 years for a first DUI. The critical California-specific rule: if your SR22 coverage lapses at any point, the clock resets entirely to zero — all prior compliance time is forfeited and the 3-year period restarts. California also retains DUI on your record for 10 years and prohibits credit scoring in insurance pricing.

Does Florida require SR22 or FR44 for DUI?

Florida requires FR44 — not SR22 — for DUI convictions. FR44 requires $100,000/$300,000/$50,000 in minimum liability coverage, much higher than standard SR22 minimums. Purchasing SR22 when you need FR44 will not satisfy your legal obligation and will not result in license reinstatement. Non-DUI violations (uninsured driving, reckless driving, points) use standard SR22 in Florida.

How long is SR22 required in Illinois?

Illinois requires SR22 for 3 years for a first DUI and 5 years for a second DUI. Illinois also has one of the highest DUI reinstatement fees — $500. The state triggers suspension quickly for point accumulation: 3 violations in 12 months, 5 in 24 months, or 7 in 36 months. Illinois DUI reinstatement requires a formal DMV hearing in addition to SR22 and alcohol evaluation.

How long is SR22 required in Ohio?

Ohio requires SR22 for 3 years for most violations. Ohio has the lowest reinstatement fee among major states at $40. Ohio uses “OVI” (Operating a Vehicle while Impaired) rather than DUI or DWI. Ohio is one of the most affordable SR22 states nationally for both premiums and fees.

How long is SR22 required in Georgia?

Georgia requires SR22 for 3 years for DUI, reckless driving, and driving without insurance. Georgia uses SR22A for repeat uninsured drivers, requiring full annual premium upfront. The Georgia reinstatement fee is $210. Georgia’s 5-year DUI record retention window is shorter than California, Texas, and Florida’s 10-year windows, meaning faster rate recovery after the requirement ends.

What states require FR44 instead of SR22?

Only Florida and Virginia require FR44 instead of SR22, and only for DUI convictions. No other states use FR44. All other violations in Florida and Virginia, and all violations in all other states, use standard SR22. FR44 requires significantly higher minimum liability limits — $100k/$300k/$50k in Florida and $50k/$100k/$40k in Virginia — which is why it costs more than standard SR22.

What is SR22A and which states use it?

SR22A is a variant of SR22 used in Texas and Georgia specifically for drivers with repeat uninsured driving violations. Where standard SR22 can be paid monthly, SR22A requires the full annual premium paid upfront — eliminating the possibility of a missed monthly payment causing a lapse. SR22A is more expensive upfront but provides guaranteed 12-month compliance once paid.

What happens if I get a DUI in one state but now live in another?

Your original state’s SR22 requirement applies regardless of where you now live. You must maintain SR22 filing with the original state for the full required period — even if you have a new state driver’s license and have lived elsewhere for years. Your new state may also impose its own independent requirement. Use a national insurer who can file SR22 with the original state while covering you in your current state. Ignoring the original state creates license complications under the Driver License Compact.

Do all states accept the same SR22 form?

No. While most states use a standardized SR22 form, some have state-specific variants. Florida and Virginia use FR44 for DUI. North Carolina uses DL-123. Indiana uses SR50 alongside SR22. Delaware uses its own financial responsibility certificate. Your insurer must file the correct form for your specific state — filing the wrong form does not satisfy your requirement.

What are the minimum liability limits required with SR22 in California?

California’s minimum liability limits are 15/30/5 — $15,000 per person bodily injury, $30,000 per accident bodily injury, and $5,000 property damage. These are among the lowest minimum limits in the country. SR22 certifies that you carry at least these minimums. Note that California’s minimums are very low and may be insufficient in a serious accident — many insurance professionals recommend higher limits even during the SR22 period.

How do I find out exactly what SR22 requirements apply in my state?

Call your state DMV directly — this is the only authoritative source. Ask: your exact SR22 start and end dates, the specific form type required (SR22, FR44, DL-123, SR50, etc.), the minimum coverage levels that must be certified, the reinstatement fee amount, and any other requirements that must be satisfied for full license reinstatement. Get this information in writing. State laws change, and information from any secondary source — including this guide — may not reflect the most current requirements in your specific situation.

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