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HAWAII · SR-22

SR-22 Insurance in Hawaii — Filing, Cost & Removal

Hawaii is the cheapest state in the country for baseline SR-22 policies because of low statewide auto-claim severity — but very few carriers actively write here, so always quote at least two local insurers (Island, First). A SR-22 isn't insurance itself — it's a form your auto insurer files with the Hawaii Division of Motor Vehicles (county-administered) (HI DMV) proving you carry at least Hawaii's minimum 20/40/10 liability coverage. Filing is electronic with most carriers and stays required for 3 years.

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SR-22 filing fee (HI)

$20–$40

Avg HI SR-22 premium

$2,560/yr

Required filing period

3 years

  • Hawaii minimum liability: 20/40/10
  • Electronic filing to HI DMV — 24-hr typical
  • Non-owner SR-22 available
  • Out-of-state move? Filing transfers to new DMV
  • Lapse during filing window typically resets clock
  • FR-44 not used in this state

Published 2026-05-17 · Last reviewed 2026-05-17

Who needs a SR-22 in Hawaii

HI DMV requires a SR-22 filing after specific driving offenses or license actions in Hawaii. The agency notifies you in writing — usually as part of a reinstatement order. In Hawaii, the common triggers are:

  • DUI / DWI / OWI conviction
  • Driving without insurance in Hawaii (citation, not just lapse)
  • At-fault accident while uninsured
  • Repeat moving violations leading to license suspension
  • Excessive points and license revocation
  • License reinstatement after suspension for any cause

How filing actually works

You don't file the SR-22 — your insurer does. You buy a Hawaii auto policy that meets at least the state's 20/40/10 minimum (higher limits are almost always a better idea, especially after a serious offense), and the insurer electronically files Form SR-22 with HI DMV. Confirmation typically posts within 24 hours.

The insurer charges a one-time filing fee — generally $20–$40 in Hawaii — paid at policy inception. They'll re-file if you switch carriers mid-term, but it's almost always cleaner to start the new policy with the filing endorsement attached from day one.

Critical rule for Hawaii: the policy must stay continuously in force for the full 3 years. If your policy lapses for any reason — non-payment, voluntary cancellation, anything — your insurer is legally required to notify HI DMV, your license is re-suspended, and the 3 years clock typically restarts from zero.

What SR-22 actually costs in Hawaii

The SR-22 filing itself is cheap — $20–$40 one-time. The expensive part is the underlying policy, because the offenses that triggered the filing also surcharge your premium.

A Hawaii driver with a single DUI on record and a SR-22 filing averages about $2,560/year for minimum-limit coverage — roughly 2.0x the ~$1,280/year a clean-record minimum-coverage policy averages in HI. Drivers with multiple offenses or recent at-fault accidents on top of the filing can pay 30–60% more again.

Carrier choice matters more here than anywhere else in insurance. Progressive and GEICO are typically the most competitive Hawaii SR-22 writers, with Progressive, GEICO, Island Insurance, First Insurance Hawaii all worth quoting. Major mainstream carriers (State Farm, Allstate, Farmers) usually quote SR-22 policies 30–60% higher than the high-risk specialists in HI — they don't actively pursue this business.

Hawaii administers DMV functions at the county level — Honolulu, Maui, Kauai, and Hawaii County each accept SR-22 filings slightly differently. Most carriers handle the routing, but turnaround on Neighbor Islands runs 3–5 business days vs Oahu's 24–48 hours.

Non-owner SR-22 — when you don't have a car

If Hawaii requires the filing but you don't own a vehicle (lost it, never had one, you borrow family cars), you need a non-owner SR-22 policy. It's a liability-only policy that covers you when you drive vehicles you don't own, and includes the required filing.

Non-owner SR-22 in Hawaii runs about $320–$520/yr — substantially cheaper than a full owner policy because it doesn't cover any specific vehicle. Carriers that write them in HI include Progressive, GEICO, Island Insurance, First Insurance Hawaii. Coverage is liability-only; there's no comprehensive or collision.

Important caveat: a non-owner policy does NOT cover vehicles owned by anyone you live with. If your spouse, roommate, or parent owns a car you regularly drive, you need to be listed on that policy too — your non-owner SR-22 won't pick up that claim.

How to drop the SR-22 when you're done

After your 3 years filing period ends, your insurer doesn't automatically drop the SR-22 — you have to ask. Call your insurer, confirm HI DMV's records show the period satisfied, and request the SR-22 endorsement be removed. Your policy continues normally; your premium typically drops 15–30% at the next Hawaii renewal.

If you've moved out of Hawaii during the filing period, the obligation moves with you. Your new state's DMV will require equivalent proof — SR-22 in most states, FR-44 in Virginia and Florida. Tell your insurer about the move immediately; they handle the cross-state transfer.

Once dropped, the SR-22 itself disappears from HI DMV's active list, but the underlying offense (DUI, etc.) stays on your Hawaii driving record for the standard look-back period — typically 5–10 years depending on offense — and continues to affect premiums even after the filing is gone.

Common Questions

Answers Before You Call

How much does SR-22 insurance cost in Hawaii?+

The SR-22 filing itself costs $20–$40 (one-time fee). The underlying auto policy averages about $2,560/year for a single-DUI driver at minimum HI limits — roughly 2.0x a clean-record minimum-coverage premium. Progressive and GEICO are usually the cheapest options.

How long do I need SR-22 insurance in Hawaii?+

3 years from the date HI DMV requires the filing. The policy must stay continuously in force for the full period — any lapse typically restarts the clock and re-suspends your Hawaii license.

Can I get SR-22 insurance if I don't own a car in Hawaii?+

Yes — a non-owner SR-22 policy covers you when driving vehicles you don't own and includes the required filing. In Hawaii this runs $320–$520/yr. You cannot use a non-owner policy for any vehicle owned by someone in your household.

How fast can the SR-22 be filed with HI DMV?+

Most Hawaii carriers electronically file SR-22s within 24 hours of policy inception. HI DMV typically updates your record same-day or next-day. License reinstatement happens once filing is confirmed and any state reinstatement fees are paid.

Will a Hawaii SR-22 follow me to another state?+

Yes. The filing obligation transfers with you. Your new state's DMV will require equivalent proof — SR-22 in most states, FR-44 in Virginia and Florida. Your insurer handles the cross-state filing.

Which carriers write the cheapest SR-22 policies in Hawaii?+

Progressive and GEICO are typically the most competitive. The full short list worth quoting in HI is Progressive, GEICO, Island Insurance, First Insurance Hawaii. Avoid assuming your current standard-market carrier will quote the best SR-22 rate — they usually don't.

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Call Now (855) 629-1574Free quote service. CoverShield connects you with state-licensed insurance agents — we don't issue policies. By calling you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms.