🚗 DUI Cost Tool

DUI / DWI True Cost Calculator

The fine is just the beginning. Calculate the full financial cost of a DUI — most people are shocked by the true total. All 50 states, first offense and repeat.

🇺🇸 All 50 States
🔒 100% Private
âš¡ Instant Results
🚗 Your DUI Details
Enter the details of your situation. Results are estimates based on typical costs in your state category — actual amounts vary by county and judge.
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💸 Your Estimated DUI Total Cost

Based on your state category and offense details
Best Case
Plea deal, minimal disruption
Worst Case
Trial, CDL, job loss
Full Cost Breakdown
⚖️ Court Fines & Fees
👔 Attorney Fees
🔑 Ignition Interlock (12 mo.)
🚗 Insurance Surcharge (3 yrs)
📋 License & Program Fees
💼 Lost Wages / Income
Impact Factors
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🔍 A DUI Attorney Can Significantly Reduce These Costs

An experienced DUI attorney may get charges reduced, penalties minimized, or in some cases dismissed entirely. A good attorney often costs far less than paying the maximum penalties — and protects your license, record, and livelihood. Most offer free consultations.

Find a DUI Attorney Near Me →
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The True Cost of a DUI: Why It's Far More Than the Fine

Most people arrested for a DUI focus on the fine — but the fine is often the smallest part of the total cost. The true financial impact of a DUI spreads across years and touches almost every area of your financial life.

Court fines and assessments vary widely by state but typically range from $500–$3,000 for a first offense, and can exceed $10,000 for repeat offenders or aggravated circumstances. These often don't include mandatory "assessment fees" that can double the base fine.

Attorney fees for a DUI defense attorney typically range from $1,500–$5,000 for a first offense plea, and $5,000–$15,000+ if the case goes to trial. While this seems expensive, an attorney can often dramatically reduce the total cost by negotiating reduced charges or avoiding a conviction entirely.

Insurance is the hidden killer. An SR-22 requirement and DUI on your record typically increases auto insurance premiums by $1,500–$3,000 per year for 3–7 years — adding $4,500–$21,000 to your total cost that most people never properly calculate.

⚖️ DUI Cost Calculation Methodology

This calculator uses a deterministic financial model based on the three primary legal tiers of DUI severity in the United States. Our logic factors in the following compound variables:

The 3-Year Surcharge Rule

Insurance surcharges are calculated using a 36-month baseline. High BAC (.15+) results in a 1.6x multiplier on top of standard SR-22 premiums.

Opportunity Cost Logic

Lost wages account for 5 (First) to 25 (Third) days of court dates, DUI classes, and community service, based on the user's reported daily wage.

💡 Expert Tip: Procedural errors in breathalyzer calibration occur in approximately 12-18% of cases. Defense attorneys prioritize these maintenance logs to suppress evidence and reduce the calculated costs shown above.

Frequently Asked Questions

A first-offense DUI typically costs between $8,000 and $25,000 when all expenses are totaled over 3 years — including fines, attorney fees, ignition interlock rental, SR-22 insurance increases, DUI school, and license reinstatement fees. Some states are significantly more expensive; in California, a first DUI can total $15,000–$20,000 in direct costs alone.
A DUI typically stays on your driving record for 3–10 years depending on your state, and affects insurance rates for that entire period. Most insurers will surcharge your premium by 50–200% after a DUI conviction. Some insurers will drop you entirely, forcing you into the high-risk (SR-22) market at even higher rates. After the DUI falls off your record, you may need to shop for a new insurer to get competitive rates.
Possibly. DUI attorneys review the arresting officer's conduct, the validity of the traffic stop, the calibration and maintenance records of the breathalyzer used, field sobriety test administration, and chain of custody for blood samples. Procedural errors are common and can lead to evidence suppression or case dismissal. Even when dismissal isn't possible, a skilled attorney can often reduce charges to a "wet reckless" (reckless driving with alcohol) which carries significantly lower penalties.