SR-22 Insurance Cost Estimator
Estimate your annual SR-22 insurance premium based on your state, violation type, driving history, and coverage level. SR-22 is a certificate of financial responsibility — not insurance itself — filed by your insurer with the state DMV.
Formula
Annual SR-22 Premium = Base State Premium × Violation Multiplier × Coverage Multiplier × Age Multiplier × Prior Insurance Factor × Vehicle Multiplier
Total SR-22 Period Cost = (Annual Premium × Years Required) + One-Time Filing Fee
- Base State Premium: Average annual auto insurance cost by state (e.g., CA $1,900, FL $2,200, MI $2,400)
- Violation Multiplier: DUI = ×1.85 | Reckless = ×1.55 | Suspended License = ×1.45 | At-Fault Accident = ×1.40 | Uninsured = ×1.35 | Excessive Points = ×1.30
- Coverage Multiplier: State Minimum = ×0.55 | Standard Liability = ×0.80 | Full Coverage = ×1.00
- Age Multiplier: Under 21 = ×1.40 | 21–24 = ×1.20 | 25–64 = ×1.00 | 65–74 = ×1.10 | 75+ = ×1.20
- Prior Insurance Factor: Had coverage = ×0.92 | Was uninsured = ×1.00
- Vehicle Multiplier: Sedan = ×1.00 | SUV/Truck = ×1.08 | Sports Car = ×1.22 | Motorcycle = ×0.85
- SR-22 Filing Fee: Flat $25 (national average; ranges $15–$50 by state and insurer)
Assumptions & References
- SR-22 is a certificate of financial responsibility filed by your insurer with the state DMV — it is not a separate insurance policy.
- Most states require SR-22 for 3 years; some require 1–5 years depending on violation severity (IIHS, state DMV guidelines).
- Base state premiums sourced from NAIC 2023 Auto Insurance Database Report and Bankrate 2024 state averages.
- DUI/DWI violations typically cause the largest premium increases — averaging 70–90% above a clean-record premium (Insurance.com, 2024).
- SR-22 filing fees range from $15 to $50 as a one-time charge; $25 used as the national average (ValuePenguin, 2024).
- Non-owner SR-22 policies (for drivers without a vehicle) are typically 30–40% cheaper than standard SR-22 policies and are not modeled here.
- Credit score, ZIP code, marital status, and annual mileage also affect premiums but are excluded for simplicity.
- Some states (e.g., Virginia, Florida) use FR-44 instead of SR-22 for DUI offenses, which requires higher liability limits and costs more.
- Estimates do not constitute an insurance quote. Always compare rates from multiple licensed insurers.
- References: NAIC (naic.org), Insurance Information Institute (iii.org), Bankrate, ValuePenguin, NerdWallet SR-22 guides (2024).