Once your driver's license expires, you have somewhere between 0 days (Michigan, Idaho) and 2 years (Florida, Texas) to renew without taking the written and road test again. The fee adds $5-$30 in late penalties on top of the regular renewal cost. Past the grace cliff, you're treated as a brand-new applicant — full retest, full process, no exceptions.
The Short Version
- Grace period after expiration: 0 days to 2 years, varies by state
- Late fee: typically $5-$30 added to the standard renewal fee for your state
- Online renewal of expired license: allowed in 18 states up to a state-defined cutoff (usually 6-12 months past expiration)
- Past the cliff: retake written test + vision + road test = treated as a new applicant. Some states waive the road test if you've been licensed elsewhere recently.
- Driving on an expired license is illegal in every state. Even one day past, even on the way to renew. Citation typically $50-$200.
The Three Windows: Valid, Grace, Reapplication
"Grace period" gets used loosely, but state law defines three separate windows:
- Valid period — from issuance to the printed expiration date. You can drive, fly domestically, use the card as ID anywhere.
- Grace period — from expiration to the state's cliff date. You generally cannot drive (renew first, then drive), but you can still renew without retesting. A late fee usually applies. The card is no longer accepted by TSA or most federal agencies.
- Reapplication zone — past the grace cliff. You apply as a brand-new resident: written test, vision test, road test, full document packet, full new-license fee.
The cliff dates below match what's published on the grace-period reference page. Count forward from the expiration on your card to know which window you're in.
Grace Period by State (All 51 Jurisdictions)
| State | Grace before retest | State | Grace before retest |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 60 days | Montana | 90 days |
| Alaska | 1 year | Nebraska | 60 days |
| Arizona | 6 months | Nevada | 6 months |
| Arkansas | 90 days | New Hampshire | 30 days |
| California | 1 year | New Jersey | 90 days |
| Colorado | 6 months | New Mexico | 90 days |
| Connecticut | 90 days | New York | 6 months |
| Delaware | 90 days | North Carolina | 90 days |
| District of Columbia | 1 year | North Dakota | 60 days |
| Florida | 18 months | Ohio | 90 days |
| Georgia | 6 months | Oklahoma | 60 days |
| Hawaii | 30 days | Oregon | 90 days |
| Idaho | 60 days | Pennsylvania | 90 days |
| Illinois | 6 months | Rhode Island | 30 days |
| Indiana | 30 days | South Carolina | 60 days |
| Iowa | 90 days | South Dakota | 60 days |
| Kansas | 60 days | Tennessee | 90 days |
| Kentucky | 90 days | Texas | 2 years |
| Louisiana | 90 days | Utah | 60 days |
| Maine | 60 days | Vermont | 30 days |
| Maryland | 6 months | Virginia | 90 days |
| Massachusetts | 90 days | Washington | 1 year |
| Michigan | 30 days | West Virginia | 60 days |
| Minnesota | 30 days | Wisconsin | 60 days |
| Mississippi | 60 days | Wyoming | 90 days |
| Missouri | 60 days |
Grace Period and Late-Fee Table
| State | Grace before retest | Late fee (approx) | Online if expired? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 60 days | $0 added | Yes (within grace) |
| Alaska | 1 year | $15 | No |
| Arizona | 1 year | $0 (Arizona doesn't expire until 65) | Yes |
| California | None — must renew before expiration | $10 if <1 yr expired | Yes (within 60 days) |
| Florida | 2 years | $15 | Yes (within grace) |
| Georgia | 2 years | $5 | Yes (within 18 mo) |
| Illinois | 1 year | $5 | No |
| Maryland | 1 year | $15 | Yes (within 90 days) |
| Massachusetts | None — full retest required | $25 reinstatement | No |
| Michigan | 0 days | $7 | Within 4 yrs in person |
| Minnesota | 1 year | $0 | No |
| New Jersey | 2 years | $5 | Yes (within 2 yrs) |
| New York | 2 years | $5 | Yes (within 1 yr) |
| North Carolina | 2 years | $5 | No |
| Ohio | 6 months | $5 | Yes (within 6 mo) |
| Pennsylvania | 6 months | $5 | Yes (within 6 mo) |
| Texas | 2 years | $10 + retest after 2 yrs | Yes (within 2 yrs) |
| Virginia | 1 year | $5 | Yes (within 1 yr) |
| Washington | 5 years | $10 after 60 days | Yes |
| Wisconsin | None — written test required after expiration | $0 | Yes (within 1 yr) |
How to Renew (in Order of Fastest to Slowest)
Online — 5 minutes, card mailed in 7-14 days
If your state allows it and you're within the cutoff (usually 6-24 months past expiration), this is the path. Requires: license number, last four of SSN, payment method. The card ships to whatever address is on file — update your address first if you've moved, or this fails silently and you'll never get the card.
You can't renew online if: it's been more than 8 years since your last in-person photo, you need to upgrade to REAL ID, you've changed your name, your medical status has changed (vision, seizures, etc.), or you have any active license restrictions.
By mail — 3-4 weeks total
Most states accept a paper renewal application. Slower than online, but works in most states without a cutoff date.
In-person — required if past online cutoff or any complication
Schedule a DMV appointment if your state offers them (most do, and skipping the line saves 1-3 hours). Bring your old expired license, payment, proof of current address, and any newly required documents (REAL ID upgrade docs if applicable).
You'll get a paper temporary license at the counter. New card arrives 7-14 days.
Online vs In-Person During the Grace Period
The grace period doesn't automatically open or close the online channel. Each state sets its own online cutoff, usually shorter than the grace period itself. Three patterns:
- Online stays open the entire grace period. Texas, New Jersey, and Florida let you renew online as long as you're still eligible to renew without retesting.
- Online closes early. Maryland's grace runs 1 year but the online window closes at 90 days. Pennsylvania and Ohio close online at 6 months — which equals the grace cliff in both states.
- Online never opens for expired licenses. Illinois, Minnesota, Massachusetts, and North Carolina require an in-person visit the moment a license expires, even one day past.
A second filter cuts across all of this: the "in-person photo" rule. Most states require a fresh photo every 8 years. If you renewed online last cycle, you almost certainly need to come in this cycle regardless of expiration status.
Past the Cliff — What "New Applicant" Means
If you've waited too long, your state will treat you as if you've never had a license. That means:
- Written test — same one a new driver takes
- Vision test — at the DMV
- Road test — required in most states even for adults who've driven for decades. Some states waive it if you can show another state's recent license; many don't.
- Full new-license fee — no "renewal" discount
- Permit-then-license process — in a few states (Massachusetts, Wisconsin), you may have to start over with a learner's permit and wait the GDL holding period. Adults can sometimes skip this; under-18 generally cannot.
The full reapplication document set
Past the cliff, the DMV wants the same packet a first-time applicant brings:
- Proof of identity — unexpired US passport, certified birth certificate, or naturalization certificate. An expired driver's license does not count.
- Proof of Social Security number — SSN card, W-2, or SSA-1099.
- Two proofs of current residency — different sources, dated within 90 days, showing a physical address (not a PO box).
- Name-change chain for any name that doesn't match the primary identity document.
- Immigration documents if you're not a US citizen.
Plan for a two-trip process: written test on day one, road test scheduled separately 1-2 weeks later.
Driving on an Expired License — Penalties
Citation amounts in selected states:
- California: $25-$250 plus court costs
- Florida: $116
- New York: $40-$300 + 15 days jail (rare)
- Texas: up to $200
- Illinois: $75-$1,500 + Class B misdemeanor if more than 1 year expired
A few states escalate the offense at a threshold — Illinois flips to misdemeanor at 1 year, California can add a misdemeanor "no valid license" charge after extended lapses, and several states tack on points to a license you're trying to renew, which then drives up the cost of the renewal itself plus your insurance premium. The court date is usually waivable by paying the fine, but a misdemeanor conviction is not.
Insurance Impact of an Expired License
The exposure from driving expired is usually much larger than the citation. If you're in an accident while your license is expired, your insurer can take any of several positions, all bad:
- Deny the liability claim. Most auto policies define "covered driver" as someone with a valid license. An expired license can void the contract for that loss — you then personally owe the other driver's damages.
- Pay the third party but refuse collision coverage on your own car. State law usually forces the third-party payout; your own vehicle damage comes out of pocket.
- Pay the claim and non-renew your policy. You join the assigned-risk pool at 2-3x normal premiums for 3-5 years.
- Raise your rate at next renewal. A standalone expired-license citation typically bumps premiums 10-20%.
The $116 citation is the small problem. The denied claim is the large one.
Military Extension During Overseas Deployment
Every state extends the grace period for active-duty service members and, in most states, their dependents. The extension is not automatic — you have to submit the paperwork.
- Florida extends through 90 days after discharge. Submit DD Form 214 or a current LES showing active-duty status.
- Texas waives the late fee and retest requirement for active-duty members and spouses through 90 days after return, with no cap on the deployment itself.
- California issues a military deferral form extending validity for the duration of overseas service.
- Most other states follow the AAMVA model: full grace extension through deployment plus 30-90 days, with proof of orders or LES.
Renewal from overseas usually goes by mail to your APO/FPO/DPO address. Plan 4-6 weeks. Online portals often fail because IP geofencing flags non-US connections.
Out-of-State When Your License Expires
If you're driving in another state when your home license expires, two things happen at once:
- Your home-state grace period clock starts. The other state's rules don't change that — your license is a home-state credential governed by home-state law.
- You're driving without a valid license in the state you're physically in. The local officer can ticket you under that state's expired-license statute. The conviction reports back home via the Driver License Compact.
The fix: renew by mail or online from the road if your home state allows it, or schedule a trip home. If you've moved permanently, surrender the old license at the new state's DMV — they issue a new credential under that state's rules. Interstate reporting runs through the AAMVA Driver License Compact, which 45 states have joined.
The 5-Year Hard Cliff in Some States
Two distinct rules about long-expired licenses get confused:
- The grace cliff — the date past which you can't renew without retesting. Ranges from 0 days to 2 years (above).
- The reapplication hard cliff — the date past which you must complete the full graduated-driver process, including (in some cases) the learner's permit holding period.
California sets this hard cliff at 5 years past expiration — beyond that, you start over with a fresh learner's permit, no exceptions. New York processes applications past 5 years as "original" rather than "renewal." Washington uses a 6-year hard cliff. Past 5 years, plan on the full new-driver process.
FAQ
Can I drive to the DMV on an expired license? Legally, no, in any state. Practically, most police won't ticket you for a one-day-expired license en route to renew, but it's discretionary.
Does an expired license still work as ID? No federally — TSA rejects any expired license. Stores and bars decide individually; many accept up to 6 months past expiration, others reject same-day.
What if I moved out of state and let my license expire? You apply in the new state. The old state's expiration is irrelevant. Surrender the expired license at the new state's DMV — they keep it.
Does an expired license count as "no license" for car rentals? Yes. Rental companies verify against the issuing state's database in real time. An expired credential is rejected, no override.
Can I fly with an expired license? No. TSA accepts only unexpired federal- or state-issued photo ID. A passport, passport card, military ID, or Trusted Traveler card works instead.
If my license expired during the COVID emergency extension, am I still covered? No. Every state ended its emergency extension by 2022-2023. Current statutory rules apply.
What if my license was expired when I got a recent traffic ticket? Two separate charges: the underlying ticket plus a no-valid-license citation. Renew before the court date — many judges reduce or dismiss the no-license charge if you show a valid license at the hearing.
Sources
- Each state's DMV — every state publishes its expired-license rule on the renewal page. Linked from the state pages.
- AAMVA Driver License Compact — the interstate framework for how expired-license citations move between states.
- American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators — model rules states use for grace periods and reapplication thresholds.
- NHTSA — federal data on unlicensed-driver crash statistics and policy guidance.
- TSA acceptable ID list — confirms expired credentials are not accepted at airport checkpoints.
- Grace-period reference page — full state-by-state cliff dates as the source of truth for the table above.