License reinstatement cost calculator
Estimate the total cost of getting a suspended driver's license back — admin reinstatement fee + SR-22 filing + ignition-interlock lease + DUI/defensive-driving school. Pick your state, suspension reason, and case-specific add-ons.
Estimates only — court fines, restitution, and individual insurance-premium increases vary widely by case. Always verify with your state's official DMV and an attorney for case-specific guidance.
How this calculator works
License reinstatement is rarely just "pay one fee and you're back." Most suspensions — especially DUI — stack four to six separate charges on top of any court fines. This calculator sums the major out-of-pocket components:
- Admin reinstatement fee — paid to your state DMV before they'll re-issue. Ranges from $30 (Maryland non-DUI) to $1,200 (Massachusetts DUI). DUI-specific fees are usually 2× to 12× the non-DUI baseline.
- SR-22 filing fee — one-time charge from your insurer (~$25). The real cost of SR-22 is the premium increase, not the filing — many high-risk policies double or triple for the 3-year filing period.
- Ignition Interlock Device (IID) — typical install $75–$150 + monthly lease $65–$110. Mandatory in most states for a first DUI; required period ranges from 3 months (NV first offense) to 24 months (MA second offense).
- DUI / alcohol-education school — court-ordered class. Tuition ranges from $100 (ME) to $1,100+ (OR DUII diversion). State-by-state variance is huge.
- Defensive-driving / point-reduction course — typically $25–$200 for non-DUI suspensions tied to accumulated points.
The total at the top of the result is a typical case; the "realistic range" below it widens by ±20-25% to reflect county-level variance, IID provider differences, and class-tuition spread within each state.
What's not in this calculator
Three big costs are excluded because they're case-specific:
- Court fines and restitution — first DUI fines run $400–$2,000 in most states, plus court costs ($100–$500). These come from the criminal case, not the DMV reinstatement process.
- Insurance premium increase — SR-22 itself is cheap; the underlying policy isn't. Expect 50%–200% higher annual premium for 3 years from a high-risk insurer. Across the 3-year filing period, this often adds $3,000–$8,000 to your total cost — more than every other line item combined.
- Attorney fees — typical DUI defense $1,500–$5,000+. Worth it if you're contesting; not included in our DMV-side cost view.
SR-22 vs FR-44
Two states — Florida and Virginia — use a higher-liability form called FR-44 instead of SR-22 for DUI cases. FR-44 requires roughly double the minimum liability coverage, which translates to a noticeably higher premium. The filing fee is the same ($25), but the underlying policy is more expensive. The calculator treats SR-22 and FR-44 identically on filing fee — the premium gap is in the insurance market, not in the DMV step.
Three states — Minnesota, New York, and Pennsylvania — don't use either form. They handle high-risk drivers through their own monitoring systems instead. The calculator shows $0 SR-22 filing for these states.
Related guides
- License reinstatement by state — process + waiting period
- Can I get SR-22 with a suspended license?
- Can my employer find out my license is suspended?
- Hardship license by state — work/medical exceptions
- License points by state — suspension thresholds
Sources
- Each state's official DMV reinstatement info page — linked in your calculator result.
- AAMVA model SR-22 / IID guidelines
- NHTSA impaired-driving program data
- NCSL transportation / DUI legislation summaries