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SR22 Insurance

If your state motor vehicle department, licensing agency, or a court says you need an SR-22, it usually means you must provide proof that you carry active auto insurance that meets your state’s required liability limits.

SR-22 requirements can happen after a license suspension, driving without insurance, a lapse in coverage, serious violations, or a DUI-related action. BadDrivingRecord.com is a licensed insurance agency that specializes in SR-22 insurance and helps drivers compare options in the states we write—with great insurance rates.

Owner SR22 Insurance

Choose this option if you own a vehicle and need an SR-22 filing connected to an active auto insurance policy.

Start My SR22 Quote

Non-Owner SR22 Insurance

Choose this option if you do not own a vehicle but still need an SR-22 filing to satisfy a state or court requirement.

Start My Non-Owner SR22 Quote
  • SR22 Filing Guidance

    We help you understand the filing process and what information may be needed to move forward.

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    We shop real carriers for drivers with tickets, accidents, lapses, suspensions, or SR-22 requirements.

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    We help you compare options without endless sales calls, pressure, or inbox clutter.

  • Fast Accurate Quote

    A cleaner intake and smarter review process help get options in front of you faster.

Select Your State

States We Currently Write SR22 Insurance

Explore the states where BadDrivingRecord.com currently writes SR22 insurance. Select your state to view state-specific SR22 coverage options and quote information.

Currently writing SR22 insurance in Florida, Texas, Georgia, California, North Carolina, and Virginia. More states may be added soon. If you do not see your state listed, contact us.

What Is an SR-22?

An SR-22 (often written as “SR22”) is a certificate of financial responsibility your insurance company files with your state. It tells the state:


• You have an active auto insurance policy, and
• Your policy meets (at minimum) the state’s required liability limits, and
• The state may be notified if the policy cancels, terminates, or lapses (exact monitoring rules vary by state)

 

SR-22 is not a separate insurance policy

 

You are not buying “SR-22 insurance” as its own product. You’re buying:

 

• an auto insurance policy (owner or non-owner), plus
• the SR-22 filing attached to it

 

If you’re dealing with a bad driving record, SR-22 is usually connected to the exact reason you’re classified as higher-risk (no insurance, suspension, repeat violations, DUI/DWI in many states, etc.). That’s why rates can vary so much between carriers and why shopping correctly matters.

Smiling man drives car while woman in front seat holds tablet.

Why Do States Require SR-22?

States require SR-22 when they want proof you’re financially responsible going forward. SR-22 filings are often ordered after situations like:

/ Driving without insurance (or repeat “no insurance” violations)

/ A license suspension tied to insurance or compliance issues

/ Serious moving violations

/ Accident-related financial responsibility actions

/ Court-ordered proof of insurance

/ DUI/DWI-related cases in many states (but not all)

The theme is the same everywhere: the state wants proof you’re insured and wants you to stay insured continuously for a specific period of time.

Smiling woman with long red hair sits in driver’s seat, looking out car window.
Bearded man driving car, looking ahead with city buildings outside window.

Owner SR22 Insurance

This nationwide SR-22 page focuses primarily on Owner SR22 insurance, because most drivers who need SR-22 own a vehicle.

 

An Owner SR22 policy:
• lists your specific vehicle(s) on the policy
• includes the state-required liability coverage (at minimum)
• can include comprehensive and collision (“full coverage”) if you want/need it
• includes the SR-22 filing submitted to the state

 

When owner SR-22 is usually required

Owner SR22 is typically the correct option when:
• you have a vehicle registered in your name
• you drive your own car regularly
• you finance or lease a vehicle and need comp/collision
• your state expects your compliance filing tied to a policy that insures your vehicle

 

Can owner SR22 be “full coverage”?

Yes. SR-22 is only the filing. “Full coverage” usually means you added comprehensive and collision in addition to liability.

Minimum Coverage Requirements for SR-22

Your SR-22 policy must meet your state’s minimum required liability limits (or higher if your reinstatement terms or a court order require it). Limits vary by state.

 

Common limit formats include:
• 25/50/25
• 30/60/25
• 50/100/50

 

Those are examples of formats, not a promise of what your state requires. Your state SR-22 page (and your official notice) should confirm what applies to you.

 

Practical tip: Minimum limits are the legal baseline. If you’re already considered higher-risk due to a bad driving record, it may be worth considering slightly higher limits if your budget allows—because one serious accident can exceed minimum limits quickly.

Smiling man and woman in car, man points ahead, both wear seat belts.
Two men buckle seat belts in a car, driver smiling; trees outside the window.

Non-Owner SR22 Insurance

Not everyone who needs SR-22 owns a car. Many drivers need SR-22 to reinstate driving privileges even when they don’t have a vehicle registered in their name. That’s where Non-Owner SR22 insurance comes in.

 

A Non-Owner SR22 policy typically:
• does not list a specific vehicle
• provides liability coverage for you as a driver when you occasionally drive vehicles you don’t own (subject to carrier rules)
• keeps your SR-22 filing active for compliance

 

Non-owner SR-22 is often used by drivers who want to start the SR-22 period now, then switch to an owner policy later when they buy a vehicle.

SR-22 vs SR-22A vs FR-44

SR-22 isn’t the only “proof” system you may run into.

 

SR-22
The most common proof-of-insurance filing.

 

SR-22A (in certain states/cases)
A stricter variation that may come with special conditions in certain jurisdictions. (Example: Georgia and Texas often use SR-22A in specific scenarios.)

 

FR-44 (in certain states after DUI)
Some states use FR-44 in DUI-related cases, which typically requires higher liability limits than SR-22. (Florida and Virginia are the best-known examples.)

 

Bottom line: Your reinstatement paperwork tells you what you need. If you file the wrong form, you can delay reinstatement and create extra fees.

Man driving convertible; woman smiles at camera, hair blowing in wind.
Smiling woman points out car window, man drives; both enjoy a road trip.

Is SR-22 Required After a DUI?

In many states, yes—SR-22 is commonly required after DUI/DWI as part of reinstatement or compliance. But not every state uses SR-22 for DUI, and some states require different proof systems or different filings like FR-44.

 

If your DUI involves SR-22, the compliance rules usually look like this:

• meet minimum limits (or higher if ordered)
• file SR-22 properly
• keep coverage continuous for the full term
• avoid any lapse, because a cancellation can trigger state enforcement

 

If you’re a driver rebuilding after a DUI and working with a bad driving record, stable coverage is everything. A cancellation during your filing period is the fastest way to turn a tough situation into a much worse one.

Person in plaid jacket driving, seen sideways, face partially visible.

SR-22 Timing and Processing

SR-22 filings are often submitted electronically and can be processed quickly once your policy becomes active. What can take longer in some cases is the overall DMV reinstatement process (fees, holds, court conditions, administrative steps)—not necessarily the SR-22 filing itself.

 

Important: It’s generally not accurate to assume SR-22 “takes 21 business days.” If you’re on a deadline, start early and keep proof of your active policy for your records.

 

How Long Do You Need SR-22?

SR-22 requirements are time-based and vary by state and by the reason the filing was ordered. Common SR-22 terms range from 1 to 5 years, and in some cases longer depending on the violation history.

 

Your SR-22 clock may start:
• on your reinstatement eligibility date, or
• on your conviction/judgment date, or
• on another trigger defined by your state

 

Always follow your official notice and avoid lapses.

Two women in a car, smiling; one points ahead as the other holds a card.
Smiling man drives with woman in passenger seat; trees outside car window.

How Much Does SR22 Insurance Cost?

There isn’t one universal SR-22 price. Usually:
• the SR-22 filing itself is a small administrative add-on, and
• the bigger premium increase is caused by the reason you need SR-22 (no insurance, suspension, accident, DUI/DWI, repeat violations, etc.)

 

Pricing is affected by:
• how recent and severe the violations are
• your prior insurance history (especially lapses/cancellations)
• your location and vehicle type
• your coverage choices (limits, deductibles, liability-only vs full coverage)

 

If you’re shopping with a bad driving record, comparing options matters a lot because insurers price the same risk very differently.

What Happens If Your SR22 Policy Lapses?

A lapse is one of the most expensive SR-22 mistakes.

 

If your policy cancels or lapses during the SR-22 period:
• your insurer may notify the state
• your license can be suspended again (or reinstatement can be delayed)
• you may have to pay reinstatement fees
• you may need a new SR-22 filing
• your premium may increase due to the coverage gap

 

If you already have a bad driving record, a lapse stacks on top of your existing risk and can make coverage significantly harder and more expensive.

Woman driving, hand on wheel, sunlight reflecting inside car.

State-by-State SR-22 Requirement Periods

You asked for each state’s SR-22 requirement information “for states that require them.” Below is a state-by-state list of typical SR-22 filing periods in states that use SR-22 as part of their financial responsibility system.

 

Important note: States can vary the start date (conviction date vs reinstatement date) and can extend periods for repeat or severe offenses. Always confirm your exact requirement using your reinstatement notice.

 

States that use SR-22 (typical filing period)

States that generally do not use SR-22 forms for in-state requirements

Some states use other proof systems rather than SR-22. Examples commonly cited include:

If you’re moving across state lines, you may still have to satisfy the original state’s requirement even if your new state doesn’t use SR-22.

Bearded man driving with smiling woman, window down, green scenery outside.

SR22 Insurance FAQs

Is SR22 insurance a separate policy?

No. SR-22 is a filing attached to a regular auto insurance policy.

Yes. SR-22 can be attached to a liability-only policy or a full coverage policy (liability + comprehensive + collision).

Often yes, using a non-owner SR-22 policy.

Non-Owner SR22 Page

Often, yes—but it depends on the state. Some states use different proof systems or different filings for DUI-related cases.

A missed payment can cause cancellation. Cancellation during the SR-22 period can trigger state action, reinstatement fees, and higher rates.

Start Your SR22 Quote and Get Compliant

SR-22 can feel intimidating—especially if you’re dealing with a bad driving record or trying to reinstate a suspended license. But the steps are clear: choose the correct policy type (owner or non-owner), meet your state’s minimum limits, get the filing submitted, and maintain continuous coverage until the requirement ends.

Use the state selector above to choose your state, then start your quote online to take the next step toward compliance.

Request a call from us, and we’ll get back to you as soon as possible!

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