Two Suspensions From One Kansas DUI Arrest
You were arrested for DUI in Kansas last week. The arresting officer took your license and handed you a pink temporary permit. You now face two separate suspension tracks: the Kansas Department of Revenue Division of Vehicles will impose a 30-day hard Administrative License Suspension under K.S.A. 8-1002, followed by 330 days of restricted driving privileges requiring ignition interlock installation. The criminal court will impose a separate judicial suspension as part of sentencing, running concurrently or consecutively with identical SR-22 and IID requirements. Both tracks must be satisfied independently before full driving privileges are restored.
Most first-offense DUI drivers in Kansas assume one insurance policy with SR-22 filing resolves both suspensions. It does not. The DOR administrative track requires proof of SR-22 on file with the Driver Control Bureau before restricted privileges are granted. The criminal court track requires the same SR-22 filing plus documentation of IID installation from an approved provider before any driving is permitted under court order. Your carrier must write coverage that accepts both requirements, file SR-22 with the state electronically, and maintain that filing for the full reinstatement period without lapsing.
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Get Your Free QuoteKansas DUI Reinstatement Fee
$200
This is the base fee to reinstate your license after DUI suspension in Kansas, separate from court fines, SR-22 filing fees, and IID installation costs. The fee applies to both the DOR administrative reinstatement and the criminal court reinstatement.
Kansas Department of Revenue Driver Control Bureau
Which Carriers Actually Write First-DUI Coverage in Kansas
Six carriers write post-DUI coverage in Kansas with confirmed SR-22 filing capability: Geico, Progressive, State Farm, National General, Dairyland, and The General. Each prices risk differently and applies different underwriting restrictions to first-offense DUI applicants.
Geico and Progressive maintain standard-tier underwriting for first-offense DUI with clean prior records, meaning your premium increases but you remain in the standard market rather than being pushed to a non-standard subsidiary. State Farm writes SR-22 coverage but does not publicly confirm post-DUI acceptance in all Kansas counties; availability varies by underwriting territory. National General operates as Allstate's non-standard arm and accepts higher-risk DUI applicants with slightly higher premiums than Geico or Progressive but broader geographic coverage across Kansas.
Dairyland and The General specialize in non-standard auto insurance and explicitly market to post-DUI drivers. Both file SR-22 electronically with Kansas DOR and accept IID installation documentation as part of underwriting. Dairyland operates in 38 states including Kansas and maintains AM Best financial ratings; The General is backed by Sentry Insurance with an A rating. Both offer non-owner SR-22 policies for drivers who do not currently own a vehicle but need to satisfy state filing requirements.
Bristol West writes SR-22 and post-DUI coverage in Kansas but requires broker placement; you cannot quote online directly. Carriers not confirmed to write post-DUI in Kansas: Amica, CSAA, Hartford, Travelers, and Shelter do not publicly list SR-22 or post-DUI coverage in their Kansas product offerings.
Your DUI creates two separate Kansas suspensions with identical SR-22 and IID requirements. One carrier must satisfy both the DOR administrative track and the criminal court track, or you remain suspended on whichever track is incomplete.
SR-22 Filing Window After Kansas DUI Arrest

The 30-day hard suspension period under Kansas ALS allows no driving whatsoever, restricted or otherwise. SR-22 filing during this window does not shorten the hard period. After 30 days, you may petition the court for restricted driving privileges, at which point SR-22 proof of insurance and IID installation become conditions of approval. If you do not petition for restricted privileges and serve the full 1-year DUI suspension, SR-22 filing is required at reinstatement before the DOR will restore your license.
Most Kansas DUI attorneys advise filing SR-22 before the restricted license hearing to demonstrate compliance readiness. Carriers require 24-72 hours to process SR-22 filings electronically with Kansas DOR, meaning a same-week court hearing demands advance carrier contact. Geico and Progressive file SR-22 within 24 hours of policy binding; Dairyland and The General typically file within 48 hours. State Farm processing times vary by agent and county; confirm filing speed before the hearing date.
Premium Differences Between Standard and Non-Standard Carriers
Kansas first-offense DUI drivers with clean prior records typically pay $140–$220/month for minimum liability coverage with SR-22 filing through Geico or Progressive. State Farm quotes in the same range but availability depends on underwriting territory. National General premiums run $160–$240/month for identical coverage, reflecting non-standard market pricing but broader acceptance across Kansas counties.
Dairyland and The General price post-DUI minimum liability with SR-22 at $180–$280/month, higher than standard-tier carriers but with guaranteed acceptance regardless of prior violations or lapsed coverage history. Both carriers offer payment plans with down payments under $100, making initial binding easier for drivers facing court deadlines. Non-owner SR-22 policies through Dairyland or The General run $80–$140/month, a lower-cost option for drivers who sold their vehicle after arrest or who need to maintain SR-22 filing during the hard suspension period without owning a car.
Premium estimates are based on Kansas minimum liability limits: $25,000 per person bodily injury, $50,000 per accident bodily injury, $25,000 property damage, plus required PIP and uninsured motorist coverage. Adding collision or comprehensive coverage to a post-DUI policy increases monthly premiums by $60–$120 depending on vehicle value and deductible selection. Estimates based on available industry data; individual rates vary by driving history, vehicle, coverage selections, and location.
Kansas SR-22 Filing Period After DUI
1 year
Kansas requires SR-22 filing for 1 year from the date of reinstatement for first-offense DUI. The clock starts when your license is reinstated, not when you file SR-22 or when the suspension begins. A lapse in SR-22 coverage during the 1-year period triggers automatic re-suspension.
Kansas Department of Revenue Division of Vehicles
Ignition Interlock Device Coordination With Your Carrier
Kansas law under K.S.A. 8-1015 requires IID installation as a condition of restricted driving privileges for DUI offenses. Your carrier does not install the device, but most carriers require proof of installation before binding a post-DUI policy or issuing SR-22 filing. Geico, Progressive, and State Farm accept IID installation receipts from Kansas-approved providers as underwriting documentation. Dairyland and The General accept verbal confirmation of installation with follow-up documentation within 10 days of policy binding.
IID installation in Kansas costs $70–$150 upfront plus $60–$90/month monitoring fees paid directly to the device provider, not your insurance carrier. Kansas Division of Vehicles maintains a list of approved IID providers; using a non-approved provider voids restricted license eligibility even if your carrier accepts the documentation. Common approved providers include LifeSafer, Intoxalock, and Smart Start. Confirm your provider appears on the Kansas-approved list before scheduling installation.
Compare Kansas Post-DUI Carriers Before Your Court Hearing
Your restricted license hearing or reinstatement petition requires proof of SR-22 filing at the time of the hearing. Waiting until the day before the court date limits your carrier options to whichever insurer can bind coverage and file SR-22 within 24 hours. Geico and Progressive meet that timeline in most Kansas counties; Dairyland and The General file within 48 hours; State Farm and National General processing depends on agent availability and may exceed 72 hours.
Request quotes from at least three carriers 10–14 days before your hearing. Provide your DUI arrest date, BAC level if known, prior insurance lapse dates if applicable, and whether you currently own a vehicle or need non-owner coverage. Carriers price Kansas DUI risk differently based on these variables. A driver with a .08 BAC and no prior lapses will receive standard-tier pricing from Geico or Progressive; a driver with a .15 BAC and two prior lapses in three years will be pushed to Dairyland or The General regardless of request. Knowing your tier placement before the hearing prevents last-minute scrambling when a carrier declines to write coverage. Compare Kansas DUI carriers now to lock in SR-22 filing before your court date.






