Jared, 35, Henderson
First-time DUI; pre-DUI rate was $98/month. His existing carrier non-renewed him; he compared 4 high-risk specialists and found same-day SR-22 filing at $185/month with autopay.
Compare Nevada carriers that still write competitive coverage after a DUI — with SR-22 filing included.
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Quick note for drivers with a DUI on their record
Not all Nevada carriers will write a new policy after a DUI, but those that do vary widely on price. Comparing 4 carriers after a DUI can mean a $60–$100/month difference for the same coverage and same SR-22 filing.
DUI auto insurance in Nevada is standard coverage written for a driver with a recent DUI conviction on their record. Nevada DUI penalties are among the strictest in the West — first-offense DUI typically includes mandatory license suspension, ignition interlock device, and a 3-year SR-22 requirement.
After a DUI, some carriers will non-renew you at your next renewal date; others will continue coverage but at a significantly higher rate; and a few specialize in writing high-risk profiles and may actually offer competitive new-business rates. Comparing matters more after a DUI than at almost any other point.
The good news: rates begin to come down as the conviction ages on your driving record. Most drivers see meaningful decreases at the 3-year and 5-year marks if they maintain continuous coverage and stay clean.
Your underlying policy must meet or exceed the Nevada minimum (25/50/20). Most post-DUI drivers carry at least liability; full coverage is required if your vehicle is financed.
Required after DUI in Nevada. Carrier files certificate with DMV — typically within 24 hours of policy activation.
Your insurer notifies DMV of any lapse during the 3-year SR-22 period — making autopay and paid-in-full discounts especially valuable.
DUI rate increases in Nevada are among the steepest in the country — partly because the state already starts from a high baseline rate. A driver who paid $72/month for liability before a DUI typically pays $148–$285/month after — a 100–290% increase that lasts for several years.
Rates begin to decrease after 3 years of clean driving and continuous coverage, with another meaningful drop at the 5-year mark. Comparing carriers at each renewal is essential — the carrier that priced you most aggressively post-DUI may not be the most competitive 2 years later.
| Scenario | Typical Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| First DUI, otherwise clean record | $148–$210/mo | Most common scenario in NV. SR-22 filing included. |
| First DUI + minor moving violations | $185–$255/mo | Stacked surcharges. |
| Second DUI within 7 years | $255–$415/mo | Many carriers will not write a new policy at all. |
| DUI + at-fault accident | $215–$340/mo | Highest typical post-DUI rate. |
Step one is securing SR-22-compliant insurance — without it, your license stays suspended and you cannot legally drive. Most carriers can file SR-22 electronically with Nevada DMV within 24 hours of policy activation, and many offer same-day filing.
Step two is installing an ignition interlock device (IID) if required by the court — Nevada requires IID for most DUI convictions, including first offenses with high BAC. The device itself costs $70–$120/month plus installation; it's separate from insurance but required for license reinstatement.
Step three is maintaining continuous coverage for the full 3-year SR-22 period. Even a one-day lapse triggers DMV notification and almost always results in license re-suspension and a restart of the SR-22 clock.
Paying 6 or 12 months upfront often saves 8–15% — and protects against lapse during SR-22 period.
Some Nevada carriers credit completion of court-ordered DUI programs at next renewal.
Eliminates the lapse risk that's especially dangerous during the 3-year SR-22 period.
Without insurance + SR-22, your license stays suspended. The cheapest path to driving legally is usually a high-risk specialist carrier.
You can surrender your license, but the requirement returns the moment you reinstate. For most Nevada commuters, maintaining coverage is the cheaper long-term option.
Many drivers stay with the high-rate carrier that wrote them right after the DUI without re-shopping. Comparing again at year 2 and year 3 typically unlocks meaningful savings.
Illustrative cases based on common situations. Names and details changed for privacy.
Jared, 35, Henderson
First-time DUI; pre-DUI rate was $98/month. His existing carrier non-renewed him; he compared 4 high-risk specialists and found same-day SR-22 filing at $185/month with autopay.
Mariana, 41, Las Vegas
DUI two years prior; currently paying $235/month. Re-shopped at her renewal and found a regional carrier willing to re-rate her at $165/month given her clean 24 months.
Strong post-DUI underwriting, same-day SR-22 filing, and competitive rates as the conviction ages.
Specialist in high-risk profiles, often the cheapest post-DUI rate in Nevada — though customer service ratings are mixed.
Higher upfront rate but strong renewal pricing as the DUI ages, plus local agent support.
After a DUI, drivers often grab the first 'yes' to get back on the road. Comparing 3 more carriers typically saves $60–$100/month for the same coverage in Nevada.
Even one day triggers DMV notification, license re-suspension, and a reset of the SR-22 clock.
DUI rates decline as the conviction ages. Carriers don't proactively lower your rate — you have to re-shop.
8–15% discount, plus eliminates lapse risk during the SR-22 period.
Some carriers credit completion at renewal — and it's required for full reinstatement anyway.
Rate drops as DUI ages — comparing carriers at each renewal locks in the lower market rate.
Get auto insurance after a dui options in Nevada starting from $148/mo.
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