Suspended

Driver's license reinstatement — what it takes after a suspension

What it costs and how long it takes to reinstate a suspended driver's license by state. Reinstatement fees ($30-$300), SR-22 rules, DUI vs administrative suspension, and the exact step-by-step.

11 min read · Updated 2026-05-19

If your license has been suspended, getting it back is rarely as simple as waiting out the clock. Every state requires you to actively reinstate the license — pay a fee ($30-$300 depending on state), submit proof you've handled whatever caused the suspension, and in many cases file SR-22 insurance for 3 years. Skip the reinstatement and your license stays suspended even after the suspension period ends; some states will keep flagging you in their system for years until you do the paperwork.

The two suspension paths — and why they matter

Every license suspension fits into one of two buckets, and the reinstatement process differs significantly between them:

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1. Administrative suspension

Triggered by something the DMV (not a court) decides. Common causes:

Administrative suspensions are usually the simpler path: resolve the underlying issue (pay the tickets, take a course, file proof of insurance), pay the reinstatement fee, and your driving privileges come back.

2. Criminal / court-ordered suspension

A judge issued the suspension as part of a criminal sentence. Common causes:

Criminal suspensions require more steps: DUI/DWI school, ignition interlock device (IID) installation in most states, SR-22 for 3 years, sometimes a hearing before the DMV reinstatement office, plus the standard reinstatement fee.

Reinstatement fee by state

This is the flat fee the DMV charges to reinstate, separate from any court fines, lawyer fees, SR-22 filing fees, IID installation, or DUI-school tuition. The reinstatement fee alone:

StateStandard reinstatement feeAdditional for DUI/DWI
Alabama$100+$75
Alaska$100+$200
Arizona$10-$40+$50
Arkansas$100+$150
California$55-$125+$125 + IID fees
Colorado$95+$130
Connecticut$175+$175
Delaware$200+$200
DC$98varies
Florida$45-$75+$130 (DUI)
Georgia$200-$410scaled by offense count
Hawaii$50+$50
Idaho$285+$15-$25 admin
Illinois$70-$500$500 for DUI
Indiana$250-$500scaled to suspension reason
Iowa$20-$200$200 for OWI
Kansas$100+$100-$200
Kentucky$40+$40
Louisiana$100-$300scaled
Maine$50+$50 (OUI)
Maryland$30-$45varies
Massachusetts$100$500-$1200 (OUI scaled by offense)
Michigan$125+$125 + driver responsibility fees
Minnesota$30-$680scaled by offense — DWI = $680
Mississippi$100-$175varies
Missouri$45+$45 admin per offense
Montana$100+$200 (DUI)
Nebraska$125$125 (DUI same)
Nevada$120scaled by offense
New Hampshire$100+$100
New Jersey$100+$100 + surcharges $3,000/yr × 3 yrs (DUI)
New Mexico$25+$10-$100
New York$50-$100$100 + Driver Responsibility Assessment $250/yr × 3 yrs
North Carolina$70-$140scaled
North Dakota$50-$100$50 reinstatement
Ohio$40-$650$650 for repeat OVI
Oklahoma$100-$200scaled
Oregon$75+$75 + Hardship permit fees if applicable
Pennsylvania$70-$110scaled
Rhode Island$200varies
South Carolina$100+$100-$300
South Dakota$50-$200scaled
Tennessee$65-$100+$103 (DUI)
Texas$100-$125+$125-$250 + annual surcharge program ended 2019 but legacy debt remains
Utah$50-$65+$50
Vermont$71+$71 + classes
Virginia$145-$220scaled
Washington$75-$150scaled by offense
West Virginia$100+$100
Wisconsin$200+$200 (OWI)
Wyoming$50+$50

These are the DMV's reinstatement fees alone. Add court fines, lawyer fees (if any), DUI-school tuition ($150-$600), SR-22 filing fee ($15-$25 typical), IID installation ($75-$150) + monthly monitoring ($60-$80) for the relevant suspension types. A first-offense DUI in most states totals $5,000-$10,000 all-in once you stack everything.

The standard reinstatement workflow

  1. Wait out the suspension period. Reinstatement cannot start before the suspension period ends. If you've been hardship-licensed during the suspension, that's a separate path (see hardship license article).
  2. Resolve the underlying cause. Pay every outstanding ticket, complete any court-ordered classes (DUI school, defensive driving, anger management for road-rage cases), serve any community service, pay child-support arrears in full, etc. The DMV will require proof for each.
  3. Get SR-22 (or equivalent) insurance. Most states require SR-22 for DUI, repeat moving violations, and license-revocation-related reinstatements. Get a quote first — premiums often double or triple post-DUI. Filing fee is $15-$25 paid to the insurance company, but the rate premium is the big cost.
  4. Install ignition interlock (IID) if required. Most states require IID for DUI/DWI reinstatement — even first offense in many states. Installation $75-$150, monthly monitoring $60-$80, typical period 6 months to 5 years depending on offense count.
  5. Schedule a hearing (some states / some causes). Reinstatements after medical suspensions, repeat DUI, or assault-related driving offenses often require an in-person DMV hearing where you demonstrate you've completed everything required.
  6. Pay the reinstatement fee. See state table above. Some states will let you pay online; others require in-person or by-mail payment.
  7. Take any required tests. If your license was revoked (not just suspended), most states make you retake the full written + road + vision exam as a new applicant.
  8. Receive your new license. Issued at the counter same-day or by mail in 1-3 weeks. Your record now shows "reinstated" with a flag noting the prior suspension for the state's normal retention period (typically 3-10 years).

SR-22 — the most misunderstood part

SR-22 is not insurance. It's a certificate your insurance company files with the DMV proving you're carrying at least the state's minimum required liability coverage. You ask your insurer to "file an SR-22," they charge a small fee ($15-$25), and they notify the DMV electronically.

The catch: if you cancel or lapse the policy, the insurer is required by law to notify the DMV immediately. Your license gets suspended again the day the lapse is reported. People reinstate, save money by switching to a cheaper non-SR-22 policy or letting it lapse, and find themselves re-suspended within weeks.

SR-22 is required for 3 years in most states. Florida and Virginia require 3 years from the date of reinstatement; California requires 3 years from the conviction date; some states make repeat offenders carry it for 5 years.

FR-44 is the same concept but for higher minimum coverage limits — Florida and Virginia use FR-44 specifically for DUI reinstatements (it requires double the standard liability minimums).

DUI / DWI reinstatement — the longer path

DUI reinstatement involves all the standard steps plus:

If you refused the chemical test ("implied consent" violation), the suspension is usually longer than the DUI suspension would have been — that's the design, to discourage refusing the test. Reinstatement steps are similar but with extra time before you're eligible.

Hardship license — the bridge during suspension

Most states offer a hardship license (also called restricted or occupational license) that lets you drive to work, school, medical appointments, or for child care during the suspension period. This isn't reinstatement — your license is still suspended; you just have a limited-purpose permit on top of it. See the hardship license article for the application process and per-state eligibility.

Some states require you to wait through a "hard time" period before becoming hardship-eligible — for DUI, typically 30-90 days hard time, then hardship eligible for the remainder of the suspension.

How long suspensions actually last

Standard suspension lengths by cause:

Out-of-state suspensions and the Driver License Compact

45 states (all except Massachusetts, Michigan, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and Georgia) belong to the Driver License Compact. If your license is suspended in your home state, you cannot get a new license in any compact-member state without first resolving the original suspension. The compact ensures suspensions follow you across state lines.

The 5 non-compact states will sometimes issue you a new license despite an out-of-state suspension — but that's a loophole closing fast. Several non-compact states cross-check via the National Driver Register (NDR) regardless of compact status; getting a license in a non-compact state with an active out-of-state suspension is increasingly difficult.

What this means practically: don't try to "move and get a fresh license" as a reinstatement shortcut. It rarely works in 2026 and creates a federal-database issue that follows you everywhere.

What happens to your record after reinstatement

The suspension stays on your driving record for a state-specific retention period — typically 3-10 years for moving violations, 5-10 years for DUI. Some states keep DUI on the record permanently for sentencing-enhancement purposes on future offenses (the "lookback period").

Insurance impact is independent of the DMV record — auto insurers typically rate your premium based on a 3-5 year window of moving violations, but DUI shows on the CLUE database for 7 years and on the MVR for 7-10 years depending on state. Expect 80-200% premium increase on your first post-DUI renewal, gradually returning to normal over 3-5 years if no further incidents.

The fastest path to reinstatement

  1. Call your state DMV first. Get a written list of every requirement specific to your case — they have it on file. Don't rely on general internet advice for your specific suspension. Your case number is the key.
  2. Get SR-22 quotes early. The insurance premium often dwarfs all other fees combined. Knowing the cost in advance lets you plan financially.
  3. Complete all required classes before the suspension period ends. Don't wait until day 91 of a 90-day suspension to start DUI school — many programs take 60-90 days to complete. Start early.
  4. Pay every outstanding fine before requesting reinstatement. Unpaid fees prevent reinstatement in every state.
  5. Schedule any required hearing as soon as you're eligible. Reinstatement hearings can take 30-60 days to schedule in busy states (California, New York, Texas).

If you can't afford reinstatement

Some states offer payment plans for reinstatement fees, especially for fines from unpaid tickets. About 20 states have "amnesty" programs that periodically waive penalty add-ons for paying down old tickets. Check your state DMV's "license restoration" or "amnesty" page (linked from each state page) for current programs. The Legal Aid office in your county can also help low-income drivers navigate reinstatement without paying for a lawyer.

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