SR-22 Reinstatement Fee — Oregon

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7/3/2026 · 7 min read · Published by Oregon SR-22 Auto Insurance

Oregon Charges Different Reinstatement Fees by Case Type

You were quoted $75 by someone who checked the Oregon DMV website. You show up to reinstate after a DUII suspension and the clerk asks for $85. The confusion is structural: Oregon runs a multi-tier reinstatement system where violation-based suspensions carry higher fees than administrative suspensions, but the DMV's public-facing materials emphasize the $75 base fee without breaking out the DUII-specific amount prominently.

The $75 figure applies to most administrative suspensions — insurance lapse, failure to appear, points accumulation. DUII cases trigger a separate reinstatement track with an $85 fee, reflecting the added administrative burden of verifying SR-22 compliance, ignition interlock device completion records, and DUII education program certificates. Both fees are statutory, not negotiable, and must be paid before the DMV will restore your driving privilege.

Oregon charges $85 for DUII reinstatement, not the $75 base fee the DMV website emphasizes — the difference reflects compliance verification load.

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Oregon DUII Reinstatement Fee

$85

DUII suspensions carry an $85 reinstatement fee, $10 higher than the $75 base fee for administrative suspensions. The difference reflects the additional compliance verification required for alcohol-related cases.

Oregon DMV reinstatement fee schedule

SR-22 Filing Is Required Before Reinstatement

Oregon requires SR-22 financial responsibility filing for all DUII suspensions. The SR-22 certificate must be on file with the DMV before you pay the reinstatement fee — the clerk will not process your application without proof that a carrier has submitted the filing electronically.

The filing itself costs a small one-time fee set by the carrier, typically between $15 and $50 depending on which insurer you use. The SR-22 requirement lasts 3 years from the reinstatement date, measured continuously. If your policy lapses or cancels at any point during those 3 years, your carrier notifies the DMV within 10 days and your license suspends again immediately.

Non-owner SR-22 policies exist specifically for drivers who do not currently own a vehicle but need to satisfy the filing requirement. These policies cost less than standard auto policies because they provide liability coverage only when you drive someone else's car, not coverage for a specific vehicle you own.

Oregon will not reinstate your license until both the $85 fee and the SR-22 certificate are on file — paying the fee alone does not restore your driving privilege.

What the Reinstatement Process Actually Requires

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Oregon's DUII reinstatement is a documentation-heavy process where missing a single piece stalls the entire application. The DMV verifies compliance across multiple systems before approving restoration.

You must complete the DUII Victim Impact Panel, the state-approved alcohol education program, and any court-ordered treatment before the DMV will accept your reinstatement application. Proof of completion comes as certificates from each program provider — photocopies work, but the DMV cross-references completion dates against your suspension start date to confirm you satisfied requirements during the suspension period, not before.

Ignition interlock device compliance is verified through vendor-submitted reports showing you completed the full required period without major violations. Oregon requires IID installation as a condition of any hardship permit during suspension and often extends the requirement through full reinstatement for DUII cases. The DMV pulls IID records directly from approved vendors, so you do not submit these yourself — but if your vendor has not transmitted the final compliance report, your reinstatement will stall until they do.

Implied Consent Suspensions Run Concurrently with Criminal Cases

Oregon's administrative license suspension under implied consent law (ORS 813.410) runs separately from any criminal DUII conviction suspension. If you refused the breath test, the DMV suspended your license administratively for 1 year starting from your arrest date. If you were later convicted in court, the judge imposed a separate criminal suspension. Both suspensions exist simultaneously.

The practical consequence: you must satisfy the longest suspension period and pay only one reinstatement fee, but you must meet the compliance requirements of both tracks. The criminal case requires DUII education and victim impact panel completion. The administrative case requires SR-22 and potentially IID. Your reinstatement application must show you satisfied every requirement from both suspension orders before the DMV will approve restoration.

Hardship permits are available after the initial 30-day hard suspension window closes, but only if you install an ignition interlock device and maintain SR-22 coverage throughout the hardship period. The hardship permit does not shorten your overall suspension — it allows limited essential driving (work, medical, education) while the suspension clock runs.

Oregon SR-22 Filing Period

3 years

The SR-22 requirement lasts 3 years from your reinstatement date. Any lapse in coverage during those 3 years triggers automatic re-suspension and requires starting the reinstatement process over.

ORS Chapter 806 financial responsibility requirements

Processing Time Depends on Documentation Completeness

Oregon DMV does not publish a standard processing window for reinstatement applications because the timeline depends entirely on whether your supporting documentation is complete when you submit. Applications with all certificates, proof of SR-22 filing, IID compliance reports, and court completion documents on file process in 1 to 5 business days. Incomplete applications sit in pending status until the missing piece arrives, which can stretch to weeks if you are waiting on a vendor or program provider to submit records the DMV requires.

Get SR-22 Coverage That Meets Oregon's Requirements

Carriers that write SR-22 policies in Oregon include GEICO, Progressive, State Farm, Bristol West, Dairyland, GAINSCO, and The General. Not all carriers file electronically with the DMV at the same speed — some transmit within hours, others take 2 to 3 business days. When your reinstatement timeline is tight, ask the carrier how quickly they submit the SR-22 certificate before you bind the policy.

Compare quotes from multiple carriers that specialize in high-risk and post-suspension coverage. Rates vary significantly by insurer, and the cheapest SR-22 filing fee does not always correspond to the lowest monthly premium. Request quotes that include your specific suspension details — DUII cases price differently than administrative suspensions, and your actual rate depends on how long ago the violation occurred and whether you completed all court-ordered programs.