Driving without insurance is illegal in 49 states and risks fines, license suspension, and devastating personal liability in an accident. About 14% of drivers (1 in 7) are uninsured — and they’re gambling with their financial future.
Penalties by State (Selected)
| State | Fine (1st Offense) | License Suspension | Other |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | $100-$200 | Yes | Vehicle impoundment |
| Florida | $150-$500 | Up to 3 years | Registration suspended; must carry for 3 years |
| Georgia | $200-$1,000 | 60 days - 1 year | Misdemeanor; possible jail (up to 12 months) |
| Illinois | $500-$1,000 | 3 months - 1 year | Registration suspended |
| Michigan | $200-$500 | 30 days | Plate confiscated |
| New York | $150-$1,500 | 1 year | Vehicle registration revoked |
| Ohio | $0 (1st) | 90 days | Registration suspended; must file SR-22 |
| Pennsylvania | $300 | 3 months | Registration suspended |
| Texas | $175-$350 | Yes | Surcharge $250/year for 3 years |
| Virginia | $500 fee | — | Option to pay $500 uninsured fee (only state) |
| New Hampshire | — | — | Only state with no minimum requirement |
What Happens If You’re in an Accident
| Scenario | Uninsured Driver | Insured Driver |
|---|---|---|
| At-fault | Personally liable for ALL costs (medical, property, legal) | Insurance covers up to policy limits |
| Not at-fault | May not be able to sue in some states (no-pay, no-play laws) | Can sue the other driver |
| Injuries to others | Can be sued; wages garnished; assets seized | Insurance covers liability |
| Your injuries | No PIP/medical coverage from auto policy | Covered by PIP or medical payments |
| Your vehicle | No collision coverage | Covered (if you have collision) |
Real Cost of an At-Fault Accident Without Insurance
| Damage Type | Typical Cost |
|---|---|
| Other driver’s car repair | $5,000-$20,000 |
| Other driver’s medical bills | $10,000-$100,000+ |
| Your car repair | $3,000-$15,000 |
| Your medical bills | $5,000-$50,000+ |
| Legal fees if sued | $5,000-$25,000 |
| Lost wages (yours + other driver) | $2,000-$20,000+ |
| Total potential exposure | $30,000-$230,000+ |
Minimum auto insurance costs $40-$100/month in most states. An at-fault accident without it can cost you $30,000-$230,000+.
SR-22 Requirements
| SR-22 Detail | What It Means |
|---|---|
| What it is | Certificate proving you carry minimum insurance |
| When required | After driving uninsured, DUI, at-fault accident, or license reinstatement |
| Duration | 3 years (most states) |
| Cost | $15-$50 filing fee + 20-50% higher insurance premiums |
| If lapsed | Insurance company notifies DMV; license suspended again |
| States that don’t use SR-22 | Delaware, Kentucky, Minnesota, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania use FR-44 or other forms |
No-Pay, No-Play Laws
Some states limit your ability to sue if you’re uninsured:
| State | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Alaska | Can’t collect non-economic damages (pain and suffering) |
| California | Can’t collect non-economic damages |
| Iowa | Can’t collect first $5,000 of non-economic damages |
| Louisiana | Can’t recover first $15,000 of bodily injury and first $25,000 of property |
| Michigan | Limited tort recovery |
| New Jersey | Limited tort recovery |
| Oregon | Can’t collect non-economic damages |
The Bottom Line
Driving without insurance is a massive financial gamble. Minimum liability insurance costs $40-$100/month in most states, while a single at-fault accident can cost $30,000-$230,000+. If cost is the barrier, shop around, raise your deductible, or look for state minimum-only policies. The cheapest insurance is always cheaper than no insurance.
Related: What Happens If You Cancel Car Insurance? | What Happens If You Lie on an Insurance Application?