Violations · 10 min read

FR-44 for drug-related driving offenses in Virginia

Why a drug-related impaired driving offense triggers the same FR-44 as an alcohol DUI, what the filing proves, and how to get compliant and back on the road.

In Virginia, impaired driving is impaired driving, whether the cause is alcohol, an illegal drug, or even certain prescription or over-the-counter medications. A drug-related impaired driving conviction triggers the same FR-44 filing as an alcohol DUI. The FR-44 proves you carry higher-than-minimum liability coverage, your insurer files it electronically with the DMV, and you keep a qualifying policy active with no lapse for about three years. The mechanics do not change because the impairing substance was a drug rather than alcohol. The goal is the same: prove financial responsibility, stay compliant, and protect your driving privilege.

The essentials

Why drug cases work the same as alcohol cases

The FR-44 is tied to the category of offense, not to the specific substance involved. Virginia uses the FR-44 for DUI and DWI and related impaired driving offenses because the state views them as higher risk than ordinary violations. A drug-related impaired driving conviction sits in that same category, so it carries the same insurance requirement and the same higher coverage limits.

Because of this, almost everything written about the alcohol FR-44 applies to a drug case as well. The filing process, the length of time, the no-lapse rule, and the higher liability requirement are all identical. The difference is only in the facts of the charge, not in the insurance steps that follow. Our overview of what FR-44 insurance is covers those shared mechanics in plain terms.

What the FR-44 actually proves

The FR-44 confirms that you carry more than the basic state-minimum liability coverage. Liability pays for injuries and property damage you cause to other people in a crash. For impaired driving offenses, Virginia sets these limits higher than the floor that applies to an ordinary SR-22 case. The exact amounts are fixed by the state, so the filing is about meeting that higher bar rather than choosing it yourself.

This higher requirement is the main thing that separates the FR-44 from the SR-22. An SR-22 proves the state minimum and is used for non-DUI offenses. The FR-44 proves the higher impaired driving limits. You can buy even more coverage if you want stronger protection, but the FR-44 checks that you meet the elevated amount Virginia requires.

FR-44, not SR-22, for impaired driving

It is worth being clear about which filing applies, because the two are easy to confuse. The FR-44 is for DUI, DWI, and related impaired driving offenses, and it requires the higher liability limits. The SR-22 is for non-DUI offenses, such as certain license or insurance lapses, and it proves only the state minimum. A drug-related impaired driving conviction falls under the FR-44.

Getting this right from the start saves time and money, because the wrong filing will not satisfy the DMV. If a single case involved more than one issue, the rules can get layered, so it helps to confirm. Our page on the FR-44 for a DWI in Virginia explains the impaired driving side in more detail if you want to compare wording.

Prescription and over-the-counter drugs

Many people assume only illegal drugs can lead to an impaired driving charge, but that is not how Virginia frames it. The question is whether a substance impaired your ability to drive safely, not whether the substance was legal to possess. That means certain prescription medications, and even some over-the-counter products, can be involved in an impaired driving case if they affected your driving.

This is one reason these cases can feel confusing and frustrating, especially when a medication was taken as directed. The legal details of how impairment is proven are specific to each case, so you should confirm the particulars with your attorney or the court. On the insurance side, though, the result is the same: if the conviction is for impaired driving, the FR-44 requirement follows.

How a conviction affects your premium

An impaired driving conviction is a serious mark on your record, and insurers view it as higher risk. Because of that, and because the FR-44 requires higher liability limits, your premium is usually higher than it was before. The FR-44 filing itself typically carries only a small fee, so most of the increase comes from how the carrier rates the conviction and the larger coverage, not from the form.

The encouraging part is that prices for the same required coverage vary widely between companies. Some carriers treat an impaired driving conviction more harshly than others, and a drug-related case is not necessarily rated differently than an alcohol one. That is why comparing several insurers is worth the effort, and why we do that shopping for you instead of leaving you with the first quote you find.

Underage and zero-tolerance cases

Virginia uses a zero-tolerance approach for drivers under the legal drinking age, which generally means a very low threshold applies to them. This is most often discussed in connection with alcohol, but underage impaired driving cases can also involve drugs. Because the rules for younger drivers are stricter, the path to a conviction can look different, even though the FR-44 result is the same.

The exact limits and how they are measured are legal details that change with the facts, so confirm the specifics with an attorney or the court rather than relying on a general summary. What stays constant is the insurance side: if an underage driver is convicted of an impaired driving offense, the FR-44 filing and its higher limits still apply for about the same period.

Confirm legal details

Underage and drug-impairment thresholds in Virginia are technical legal questions that depend on the facts of your case. Use this page for the insurance steps, and confirm any limit, penalty, or charge detail with an attorney or the court.

How long you keep the FR-44

Virginia typically requires the FR-44 for about three years. During that whole period you must keep a qualifying policy active, with the higher liability limits, and the filing in place. The clock generally starts from the date the DMV sets in connection with your conviction, not from the day you happen to buy the policy, so waiting to get covered does not shorten the obligation.

The exact end date is tied to your specific case. Your agent or the DMV can tell you when your obligation ends. Do not cancel coverage on your own until you have confirmed the period is truly over, because ending early can undo your progress and add more time. Our guide to DMV reinstatement after a DUI in Virginia walks through how the timeline connects to getting your license back.

The no-lapse rule, and why it matters

The single most important rule is to avoid any lapse in coverage. A lapse happens when your policy cancels for non-payment, expires, or is dropped for any reason during the filing period. When that occurs, your insurer notifies the DMV, and the DMV can re-suspend your license. In many cases the roughly three-year period restarts, which means more time under the requirement.

To stay safe, pay on time, set reminders before each renewal, and tell your agent right away if your situation changes. Keeping the same qualifying policy in force without a gap is what protects your license. Treat every due date as a hard deadline, because a missed payment can cost far more than the premium itself and can delay the day you are fully free of the filing.

How to get compliant and back on the road

Getting compliant is a short list of steps. First, buy a qualifying liability policy at the higher FR-44 limits Virginia requires. Second, ask your insurer to file the FR-44 with the DMV, which they do electronically. Third, confirm the filing reached the DMV and was accepted. Then keep the policy paid and active for the full period without any gap.

You do not have to handle the paperwork alone. As a licensed Virginia agency, we match you with a qualifying policy, send the filing, shop multiple carriers, and confirm everything landed with the DMV. If you are unsure whether your case calls for an FR-44 or an SR-22, our overview of the DUI insurance options in Virginia can help, and we will confirm before you buy.

Frequently asked questions

Yes. Virginia treats drug-related impaired driving like an alcohol DUI, so a conviction triggers an FR-44 with higher liability limits. Confirm the details of your specific charge with your attorney or the court.

An impaired driving conviction, including a drug-related one, calls for an FR-44 with higher limits. The SR-22 is for non-DUI offenses and proves only the state minimum. If you are unsure, we can confirm which applies.

They can. Virginia focuses on whether a substance impaired your driving, not whether it was legal to possess. If the conviction is for impaired driving, the FR-44 follows. Confirm the legal specifics with an attorney.

Not for insurance purposes. The FR-44 is tied to the impaired driving category, so the filing process, the higher limits, the length, and the no-lapse rule are the same whether the cause was a drug or alcohol.

Plan on about three years. You must keep a qualifying policy with the higher limits active and no lapse for the whole period. Your agent or the DMV can confirm the exact end date for your case.

There is no single number, since price varies by carrier and by your full record. A conviction and the higher limits usually raise the premium, but companies rate it differently, which is why we shop several carriers for you.

Your insurance company files it electronically once you buy a qualifying policy. You do not mail anything yourself. It is a good idea to confirm the filing was sent and accepted by the DMV.

It requires higher-than-minimum liability coverage, with the amounts set by Virginia. This is more than the state-minimum an SR-22 proves. You can buy more if you want, but the FR-44 checks that you meet the higher bar.

A lapse can lead the DMV to re-suspend your license, and the roughly three-year period often restarts. Pay on time and contact your agent right away if you think your coverage might lapse.

As soon as you can. The required period generally starts from the date the DMV sets, not from when you buy the policy, so waiting does not shorten the obligation and can delay restoring your license.

Written by FR44 Insurance of Virginia

Reviewed by a licensed Virginia insurance agent. Last reviewed June 2026. Meet our team.

Facing an FR-44 after a drug-related offense?

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