In 2026, standard driver's license renewal fees in the US range from $15 in North Dakota to $81 in Washington. The 50-state median sits around $34. Washington carries the highest combined card price at $137 once you add the Enhanced Driver's License surcharge. Most states (39) have bundled REAL ID into the standard fee at no extra charge, but 12 still split it out — and a handful tack on late fees that can double what you owe if you miss the deadline. Use the renewal fee calculator for a personalized total or scroll the table below.
The Six Things That Set Your Renewal Price
License renewal is rarely a single line item. Six variables determine the final receipt:
- Standard renewal fee. The headline number every state publishes — $15 to $81 in 2026. This usually covers a single license card valid for the state's standard cycle.
- Validity period. Cycles run 4 to 8 years for adults under 65. A 4-year cycle at $30 is the same per-year cost as an 8-year cycle at $60, even though the receipt looks twice as cheap.
- REAL ID upgrade. Bundled in most states; a one-time $1.54 to $30.50 add-on in 12 states for the first REAL ID-compliant card.
- Enhanced Driver's License (EDL). Only available in Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Vermont, and Washington. Adds $15 to $56 on top of the standard fee for a card that doubles as a land/sea border-crossing credential to Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, and Caribbean countries.
- Online vs in-person. Most states price the two channels identically. A few attach a $1-$3 convenience surcharge to the online channel; a few attach a $5-$10 mail-delivery fee. In-person counter visits are usually flat.
- Late fee. If you miss the renewal window, expect $0 to $30 on top of the standard fee. Eighteen states currently impose no late fee within a defined grace window; the rest start charging immediately after expiration.
Standard Renewal Fee — Every State
Below is the standard adult renewal fee in every US jurisdiction, current as of 2026. Values are for a non-REAL ID standard driver's license under 65 unless otherwise noted; senior, REAL ID, and EDL prices are covered separately below.
| State | Standard fee | Validity | Per year |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | $36.25 | 4 years | $9.06 |
| Alaska | $20 | 5 years | $4.00 |
| Arizona | $25 | Until age 65 | ~$0.50 |
| Arkansas | $40 | 8 years | $5.00 |
| California | $46 | 5 years | $9.20 |
| Colorado | $30.87 | 5 years | $6.17 |
| Connecticut | $72 | 6 years | $12.00 |
| DC | $47 | 8 years | $5.88 |
| Delaware | $40 | 8 years | $5.00 |
| Florida | $48 | 8 years | $6.00 |
| Georgia | $32 | 8 years | $4.00 |
| Hawaii | $40 | 8 years | $5.00 |
| Idaho | $35 | 4 years | $8.75 |
| Illinois | $30 | 4 years | $7.50 |
| Indiana | $17.5 | 6 years | $2.92 |
| Iowa | $32 | 8 years | $4.00 |
| Kansas | $26 | 6 years | $4.33 |
| Kentucky | $43 | 8 years | $5.38 |
| Louisiana | $32.25 | 6 years | $5.38 |
| Maine | $30 | 6 years | $5.00 |
| Maryland | $64 | 8 years | $8.00 |
| Massachusetts | $50 | 5 years | $10.00 |
| Michigan | $18 | 4 years | $4.50 |
| Minnesota | $32.25 | 4 years | $8.06 |
| Mississippi | $24 | 4 years | $6.00 |
| Missouri | $33 | 6 years | $5.50 |
| Montana | $41.72 | 8 years | $5.21 |
| Nebraska | $26.5 | 5 years | $5.30 |
| Nevada | $41.5 | 8 years | $5.19 |
| New Hampshire | $50 | 5 years | $10.00 |
| New Jersey | $24 | 4 years | $6.00 |
| New Mexico | $34 | 8 years | $4.25 |
| New York | $64.5 | 8 years | $8.06 |
| North Carolina | $52 | 8 years | $6.50 |
| North Dakota | $15 | 4 years | $3.75 |
| Ohio | $25.75 | 4 years | $6.44 |
| Oklahoma | $38.5 | 4 years | $9.62 |
| Oregon | $40 | 8 years | $5.00 |
| Pennsylvania | $39.5 | 4 years | $9.88 |
| Rhode Island | $61.5 | 5 years | $12.30 |
| South Carolina | $25 | 8 years | $3.12 |
| South Dakota | $28 | 5 years | $5.60 |
| Tennessee | $28 | 8 years | $3.50 |
| Texas | $33 | 8 years | $4.12 |
| Utah | $52 | 5 years | $10.40 |
| Vermont | $51 | 4 years | $12.75 |
| Virginia | $32 | 8 years | $4.00 |
| Washington | $81 | 8 years | $10.12 |
| West Virginia | $25.5 | 5 years | $5.10 |
| Wisconsin | $34 | 8 years | $4.25 |
| Wyoming | $30 | 4 years | $7.50 |
Per-year cost is the standard fee divided by the validity period. It's the most honest cross-state comparison because a state with a $40 fee on a 4-year cycle is twice as expensive per year as a $40 fee on an 8-year cycle.
REAL ID Upgrade — Bundled in Most States
The REAL ID Act (federal law) took final airport-enforcement effect on May 7, 2025. The card itself is issued by each state DMV, and most states folded the cost into the standard renewal fee — no extra charge. Fifteen states still split it out, with a one-time add-on the first time you upgrade.
| State | REAL ID add-on | What it gets you |
|---|---|---|
| Montana | +$1.54 | Smallest material surcharge |
| Oklahoma | +$4 | One-time, then renewals at standard $38.50 |
| Kentucky | +$5 | Document compliance fee |
| Louisiana | +$9 | Folded into the in-person visit fee |
| New Hampshire | +$10 | Combined with in-person mandate |
| West Virginia | +$10 | Document compliance surcharge |
| New Jersey | +$11 | Standard MVC document fee |
| Alaska | +$20 | Standard $20 + REAL ID surcharge $20 = $40 total |
| Virginia | +$20 | Plus $2 application processing |
| Maine | +$25 | Compliance enrollment fee |
| Oregon | +$30 | Adds to the $40 base for $70 first-time REAL ID |
| Pennsylvania | +$30.5 | Highest add-on nationally |
The other 39 states bundle REAL ID into the standard fee with no surcharge. If your state appears here and you don't need REAL ID — because you have a US passport, fly rarely, and don't visit federal buildings — you can keep renewing the non-compliant standard card indefinitely. See the REAL ID vs passport comparison to decide whether the upgrade is worth paying for.
Enhanced Driver's License (EDL) — Five States Only
The Enhanced Driver's License is a federally approved border-crossing document that doubles as a regular state driver's license. You can use it instead of a passport at land and sea borders with Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, and most Caribbean nations. It does not work for international flights — for that you still need a passport.
Only five states issue EDLs:
| State | EDL add-on | Total card cost |
|---|---|---|
| Michigan | +$45 | $18 standard + $45 = $63 |
| Minnesota | +$15 | $32.25 standard + $15 = $47.25 |
| New York | +$30 | $64.5 standard + $30 = $94.5 |
| Vermont | +$46 | $51 standard + $46 = $97 |
| Washington | +$56 | $81 standard + $56 = $137 |
If you cross the Canadian border twice a year by car, an EDL at $30-$45 over a 4-8 year cycle is significantly cheaper than a $130 passport that lasts 10 years. If you fly internationally — even once — you still need the passport. See the full EDL guide for the documents required and an estimated wait time at each state's EDL counter.
Hidden Surcharges — Online, Mail, and Expedited
Many states impose small additional fees that don't show up on the headline number:
- Online convenience fee. Typically $1-$3 on top of the standard fee. About 20 states absorb it; the others pass it through to the cardholder. Always disclosed at checkout.
- Mail delivery. Some states charge $5-$10 for first-class mail of the printed card. A handful of states use UPS/FedEx by default at $15+.
- Expedited card production. Five states offer a same-day or 48-hour expedited card for $25-$75 extra. Useful if you're traveling soon and a 4-6 week standard delivery wouldn't reach you.
- Duplicate fees. If you lose the card mid-cycle, expect a separate $5-$25 duplicate fee. This is independent of renewal. See lost license replacement for the state-by-state cost.
- Address-change fees. Most states do it free during a renewal cycle; mid-cycle changes are $5-$15. See change of address fees.
- Vision-test reimbursement. If your state requires an outside vision exam at renewal (rare but exists), the optometrist visit is usually $25-$75 out of pocket.
Senior Discount Programs — Many States Cut the Fee
Sixteen states give drivers 65 or older a reduced renewal fee or a free renewal in exchange for the shorter validity cycle. The discount usually kicks in between ages 65 and 75 depending on the state.
Examples:
- Illinois drops the fee from $30 to $5 at age 69 and to $2 at 81, and a full $0 free at 87.
- South Carolina waives the fee at 65 for active-duty veterans.
- Washington cuts the EDL portion at 70.
- New Mexico charges $18 at 75 down from $34 standard.
- Iowa drops from $32 to $20 at 72.
Even where the headline fee doesn't drop, the validity often does — Florida shortens from 8 to 6 years at 80, Hawaii from 8 to 2 at 72, New Mexico from 8 to 1 at 75. So the per-year cost tends to flatten or rise even when the receipt is smaller. The full state-by-state senior matrix lives at License Renewal for Seniors 65+.
Late Fees — What Triggers Them
Every state defines a grace period after expiration during which you can renew without paying extra. After that, a late fee kicks in. The longer you wait, the more it grows; eventually most states require you to retest.
| State | Grace period | Late fee |
|---|---|---|
| Connecticut | 2 years | $25 |
| Florida | 2 years | $15 |
| Massachusetts | 2 years | $25 |
| Texas | 2 years | $5 |
| Vermont | 2 years | $0 (no late fee) |
| California | 1 year | $0 (no late fee) |
| New York | 60 days | $25 ($25-$40 within 60 days; $75-$300 after 1 year) |
| Rhode Island | 30 days | $25 |
| Iowa | 60 days | $5 |
| Wisconsin | 60 days | $0 (retest required after 60 days) |
| New Jersey | 90 days | $30 (highest) |
Eighteen states have a long grace period and no late fee — Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Oregon, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming, and DC. The other 33 charge between $1 (Mississippi) and $30 (New Jersey). See the renewal grace period by state guide for the exact post-expiration timeline in every jurisdiction.
Cheapest Five States — Ranked
- North Dakota — $15. Cheapest headline price in the country. 4-year cycle. Online renewal available.
- Indiana — $17.50. 6-year cycle = $2.92/year — the lowest per-year cost in the country. REAL ID bundled.
- Michigan — $18. 4-year cycle. REAL ID bundled. EDL available for $45 extra.
- Alaska — $20. 5-year cycle, but REAL ID is a $20 add-on if you want the gold star.
- Mississippi — $24. 4-year cycle. $13 REAL ID add-on (since cleared — now bundled).
If you have flexibility on where you live and renewal cost is a real concern, Indiana wins on per-year cost at $2.92/year, edging out North Dakota despite a higher headline price because of the 6-year cycle.
Most Expensive Five States — Ranked
- Washington — $81. 8-year cycle = $10.12/year. Plus $56 EDL = $137 with EDL — highest single-card total in the country.
- Connecticut — $72. 6-year cycle = $12/year. REAL ID bundled.
- New York — $64.50. 8-year cycle. Plus $30 EDL = $94.50 with the border-crossing card.
- Maryland — $64. 8-year cycle = $8/year — high headline, moderate per-year.
- Rhode Island — $61.50. 5-year cycle = $12.30/year — the highest per-year cost in the country.
The picture changes when you factor in REAL ID, EDL, and validity. Pennsylvania looks moderate at $39.50 standard until you add $30.50 for REAL ID; over a 4-year cycle, that's $17.50/year for someone who needs both — slightly above Connecticut on a per-year basis.
How to Lower Your Renewal Cost
Five practical levers — none of them depend on luck:
- Skip REAL ID if you don't need it. If you have a US passport and fly with it, the REAL ID upgrade is purely optional. In the 12 add-on states, that saves $1.54-$30.50. Read REAL ID vs passport first.
- Renew online when allowed. Saves the travel and time-off cost; about half the states avoid any online surcharge entirely. See online license renewal by state for eligibility.
- Avoid late fees. Calendar the expiration date 90 days ahead. The DMV doesn't always mail a reminder.
- Time your move strategically. If you're relocating and not yet a resident anywhere, register in the state with the lowest per-year cost — usually Indiana, Tennessee, Nevada, or North Dakota. See moving between states for the timeline.
- Use the senior discount if you qualify. Many states have automatic discounts that staff don't proactively mention. Ask at the counter, particularly if you're 65+ or a veteran.
The Bottom Line
Driver's license renewal in 2026 is cheap by federal-document standards — a passport is $130 every 10 years; a license is $15-$72 every 4-8 years for the same basic identity utility. The hidden cost is usually time, not money. The fee is the headline; the late fee is the punishment; REAL ID and EDL are the optional add-ons.
For a personalized total tailored to your state, age, online vs in-person preference, and REAL ID status, use the renewal fee calculator on the homepage. For first-time licenses, see the first-time license cost calculator covering permit + driver's ed + road test + first license fee.