Car Insurance After a DUI: Cost + Best Companies (State-by-State 2026)

A DUI conviction roughly doubles full-coverage car insurance premiums on the national average — from about $3,283 a year clean to $4,461 a year post-DUI. State-level uplift ranges from roughly 30% (Pennsylvania, Vermont) to 100-150% (Michigan, California, North Carolina). The fastest way to recover from the spike is comparison shopping across both mainstream carriers that accept DUI risks (State Farm, Progressive, Travelers, NJM, Erie, USAA) and non-standard specialists (Dairyland, The General, Kemper, Bristol West, Direct Auto), filing the required SR-22 — or FR-44 in Florida and Virginia — and waiting out the standard 3-year lookback before re-quoting. This guide leads with the cost-and-carrier comparison most drivers actually need, complementing our SR-22 procedure walkthrough rather than repeating it.

Average cost: $3,283 clean vs $4,461 post-DUI

Industry rate data (NAIC, Insurance Information Institute, and Insure.com aggregations) puts the 2026 national average full-coverage premium at about $3,283 per year for a clean driver and about $4,461 per year for a driver with one DUI on record — a 36% national average uplift. The national average masks dramatic state-level variation:

The variation comes from three drivers: state insurance regulation (some states cap or limit DUI surcharges), the local litigation environment (states with high bodily-injury verdicts price DUI risk steeply), and minimum-liability requirements. Michigan's no-fault PIP regime and California's strict no-fault liability framework explain most of those two states' premium peaks.

Advertisement

The real number for any single driver depends on age, location, vehicle, prior record, and the carrier's underwriting appetite. Quote at least three carriers — premiums for the same driver routinely vary 60-100% across insurers post-DUI.

Best mainstream carriers that accept DUI

Most national insurers will continue to write coverage after a DUI conviction, though terms and pricing differ sharply. Six mainstream carriers consistently rank as best for post-DUI drivers:

GEICO, Allstate, and Liberty Mutual are also possibilities, but quote less competitively post-DUI than the six above in most states. Farmers, Nationwide, and Amica typically non-renew after a DUI rather than continue at a surcharge.

Non-standard / high-risk specialists

For drivers with multi-event histories (DUI plus other violations, or multiple DUIs), or in states where mainstream carriers declined to write, non-standard specialists tend to quote competitively:

None is automatically cheapest — quote across both mainstream and non-standard groups. SR-22-eligible quote tools like Insurify and The Zebra pull both groups in a single search and surface the lowest combined offer.

How long the DUI affects rates

Two clocks run independently:

Practical effect: rates begin partial recovery 12-18 months after conviction (early lookback decay at most carriers), reach near-normal at 3 years, and fully normalize at 5 years across nearly every carrier. Continuous coverage — no lapses — is essential to claim the recovery.

SR-22 / FR-44 filing requirement

Every state requires either an SR-22 or a state-specific equivalent after a DUI conviction. The filing is a one-page certificate the insurer transmits to the DMV, confirming the driver carries at least the state minimum liability coverage. Filing fee: $15-$25 per insurer per filing, charged once at the start of coverage. The underlying policy that backs it costs 50-200% more than a standard policy because the conviction marks the driver as high-risk.

Florida and Virginia require FR-44 instead of SR-22 for DUI cases. FR-44 certifies higher liability limits — Florida 100/300/50, Virginia 60/120/40 — pushing the underlying premium up another 30-50% above an SR-22 in those two states. Our SR-22 by state guide walks through the filing process, lapse risks, and FR-44 differences in detail.

3-year lookback rate reduction

Most insurers reset rates after 3 years of clean post-DUI driving. Some carriers (Progressive, State Farm, Travelers) reduce surcharges incrementally each year — often a 10-15% surcharge decrease at year 1, another 15-20% at year 2, and a full reset to the rate-class baseline at year 3. The standard playbook for capturing the reset:

  1. Continuous coverage. No lapses. Even a 7-day gap at renewal can reset the SR-22 clock and restart the 3-year DUI lookback at most carriers.
  2. No new claims. An at-fault claim during the lookback period extends and deepens the surcharge.
  3. No new moving violations. A speeding ticket or running-light citation during the lookback restarts the clock at some carriers.
  4. Re-quote at 3 years. 30-60 days before the 3-year mark, get fresh quotes from at least 3 mainstream carriers. Drivers who do this typically recover 60-80% of the DUI premium uplift by year 3 and the remainder by year 5.

Drivers who switched to a non-standard carrier (Dairyland, The General, Kemper) for the SR-22 period almost always save by switching back to a mainstream carrier (State Farm, Progressive, Travelers) at the 3-year mark — non-standard rates do not decay nearly as fast as mainstream rates do.

Will my current insurer drop me?

It depends on the carrier and state law. Most state insurance departments restrict mid-term cancellation, so an insurer who decides to drop you usually does it at renewal — non-renewing the policy with 30-60 days notice rather than cancelling immediately:

Either way, take action immediately. If you receive a non-renewal notice, you have 30-60 days to bind replacement coverage. Do not let the policy lapse — a single day uninsured during an SR-22 period triggers an automatic license suspension and may extend the SR-22 requirement by another full term. See our guide on driving without insurance penalties by state for the lapse-cost detail.

State-by-state cost table

The table below shows average full-coverage cost after a single DUI, the carrier most commonly quoted as cheapest in that state for post-DUI drivers, the typical insurer lookback period, and whether SR-22 (or FR-44 in FL/VA) is required. Sources: NAIC and III aggregated industry rate data, state DMV publications, and Insure.com 2026 post-DUI quote sample.

StateAvg full-coverage post-DUICheapest carrierLookbackSR-22
Alabama$3,250State Farm3 yrsYes
Alaska$2,980State Farm3 yrsYes
Arizona$3,910Progressive3 yrsYes
Arkansas$3,540USAA / Farm Bureau3 yrsYes
California$4,820Progressive10 yrsYes
Colorado$4,180State Farm3 yrsYes
Connecticut$3,290State Farm3 yrsYes (1 yr)
Delaware$3,610Travelers3 yrsForm CSL
District of Columbia$3,520USAA3 yrsForm CSL
Florida$5,180State Farm5 yrsFR-44
Georgia$4,290State Farm3 yrsYes
Hawaii$3,910State Farm5 yrsYes
Idaho$2,850USAA3 yrsYes
Illinois$3,640State Farm3 yrsYes
Indiana$3,180State Farm3-5 yrsYes
Iowa$2,940State Farm3 yrsYes (2 yr)
Kansas$3,520USAA3 yrsYes (1 yr)
Kentucky$4,210USAA3 yrsForm 60
Louisiana$5,040USAA3 yrsYes
Maine$2,720State Farm3 yrsYes
Maryland$3,890USAA3 yrsFR-19
Massachusetts$3,250State Farm6 yrsRMV-1
Michigan$5,910USAA3 yrsYes
Minnesota$3,490State Farm3 yrsYes
Mississippi$3,180State Farm3 yrsYes
Missouri$3,610USAA3 yrsYes (2 yr)
Montana$3,420State Farm3 yrsYes
Nebraska$3,180State Farm3 yrsYes
Nevada$4,610State Farm3 yrsYes
New Hampshire$2,810State Farm3 yrsIf court-ordered
New Jersey$3,940NJM3 yrsNJM Cert
New Mexico$3,610USAA3 yrsYes
New York$4,290Progressive3 yrsFS-1/FS-20
North Carolina$5,640NC Farm Bureau3 yrsDL-123
North Dakota$2,790USAA3 yrsYes (1 yr)
Ohio$3,210USAA3-5 yrsYes
Oklahoma$3,710USAA3 yrsYes
Oregon$3,490State Farm3 yrsYes
Pennsylvania$2,810Erie3 yrsDL-123
Rhode Island$3,890State Farm3 yrsYes
South Carolina$3,950USAA3 yrsYes
South Dakota$2,940USAA3 yrsYes
Tennessee$3,210USAA3-5 yrsYes
Texas$3,890State Farm3 yrsYes (2 yr)
Utah$3,180USAA3 yrsYes
Vermont$2,610State Farm3 yrsYes
Virginia$3,210State Farm3 yrsFR-44
Washington$3,540USAA3 yrsYes
West Virginia$3,490USAA3 yrsYes
Wisconsin$3,090State Farm3 yrsYes
Wyoming$2,720State Farm3 yrsYes

Renewal strategy week-by-week

The fastest path from conviction to lowest possible premium runs roughly like this:

Compare quotes today

Post-DUI premiums vary so widely between insurers that quoting at least three is essentially mandatory. The two tools below pull SR-22-eligible mainstream and non-standard carriers in a single search:

Frequently asked questions

How much does insurance go up after a DUI?

On a national average, full-coverage premiums roughly double after a DUI conviction — going from about $3,283 a year clean to about $4,461 a year post-DUI, a 36% national average uplift. The state-level range is much wider: Michigan, California, and North Carolina drivers commonly see 100-150% increases, while Pennsylvania and Vermont may stay in the 30-50% range. Comparison shopping across at least three carriers typically recovers 30-50% of the uplift.

Which insurance companies are best after a DUI?

For most drivers with a single DUI, the best mainstream options are State Farm, Progressive, Travelers, NJM (mid-Atlantic only), Erie (eastern US only), and USAA (military families only). For multi-event histories or extreme rate increases, non-standard / high-risk specialists tend to quote lower: Dairyland, The General, Kemper, Bristol West, and Direct Auto. None is universally cheapest — quote at least three carriers in both groups.

How long does a DUI affect my insurance rates?

Most insurers use a 3-year DUI lookback for rate-setting, but the underlying conviction stays visible on driving records and the C.L.U.E. claims database for 5-10 years depending on the state. California uses 10 years for license-restoration purposes; most states use 3-7 years for rate-impact purposes. Premiums typically begin partial recovery after the first 12-18 months of clean driving and fully normalize 3-5 years post-conviction in most states.

Will I need an SR-22 after a DUI?

Yes — every state requires either an SR-22 or a state-specific equivalent (Form CSL in DE/DC, Form 60 in KY, FR-19 in MD, etc.) after a DUI conviction. The filing fee is $15-$25 per insurer per filing. Florida and Virginia use the higher-coverage FR-44 instead of SR-22 for DUI cases, with limits of 100/300/50 (FL) and 60/120/40 (VA), pushing premiums up another 30-50% above SR-22 pricing in those states.

Can I qualify for a "lookback" rate reduction?

Yes. Most insurers reset rates after 3 years of clean driving post-conviction; some carriers (Progressive, State Farm, Travelers) reduce surcharges incrementally each year. The standard playbook: keep continuous coverage with no lapses, no claims, and no moving violations for 3 years, then re-quote across at least 3 carriers at the 3-year mark. Drivers who do this typically recover 60-80% of the DUI premium uplift by year 3 and the remainder by year 5.

Will my current insurer cancel my policy after a DUI?

Sometimes. State Farm and most preferred-tier carriers (USAA, Amica, NJM, Erie) often non-renew after a DUI conviction rather than cancel mid-term, because state law restricts mid-policy cancellation. Progressive, GEICO, and Allstate more commonly continue coverage with a high surcharge. Either way, the next renewal — your insurer's or a new one — will reflect the conviction. Get 3+ quotes 30-60 days before any non-renewal date.

Does a DUI affect car registration?

Indirectly. Most states require an SR-22 for license reinstatement, and the registration is tied to the license — meaning a suspended license usually means the vehicle cannot legally be driven by the license-holder. Some states (CA, AZ, OR) require an ignition interlock device for restricted driving privileges; the cost ($60-$100 install + $60-$100/month monitoring) is on top of insurance. The vehicle's registration itself typically stays valid.

Sources

Related guides