You Missed a Requirement and Don't Know Your Status
You missed a required DUI education class during your Delaware Conditional License period, or you skipped an ignition interlock device service appointment, or you failed to show for a monitoring check-in. The class instructor didn't say what would happen. The IID vendor sent a warning email but didn't explain the DMV consequence. You checked your mail and saw nothing from the Delaware Division of Motor Vehicles.
Delaware Conditional License terms are not suggestions—they are court-ordered or DMV-imposed conditions carrying automatic revocation for noncompliance. Unlike some states where a single missed class triggers a warning letter before action, Delaware's system reports the violation directly to DMV and your conditional authority ends the moment DMV processes the report. Most holders discover revocation only when pulled over for an unrelated traffic stop and told their license shows suspended in the system.
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Get Your Free QuoteDelaware DUI Reinstatement Fee
$143.75
This fee applies after conditional license revocation for DUI-related violations. It stacks on top of the original $25 base reinstatement fee and any ignition interlock vendor fees or program restart costs you'll face getting back to conditional status.
Delaware DMV reinstatement fee schedule
Delaware Reports Violations Faster Than You Expect
Delaware's ignition interlock vendor reports failed starts, missed service appointments, and circumvention attempts to DMV within 48 hours under state monitoring rules. DUI education providers report class absences within one week. The DMV does not call you to confirm—it processes the violation report and updates your driving record to suspended status automatically.
The conditional license itself does not expire when you miss a term. The DMV revokes your conditional driving authority, which means your underlying suspension period resumes as though you never received conditional relief. You are now driving on a suspended license if you continue operating a vehicle. Delaware does not distinguish between knowingly driving suspended and driving suspended without knowledge—the violation and its penalty are identical.
Delaware does not mail revocation notices to all conditional license holders whose authority is terminated. If your address on file with DMV is outdated, or if the notice was sent but delayed, you may remain unaware for days or weeks. The legal standard is constructive notice—DMV assumes you know your status once the record updates, whether you received physical notice or not.
Delaware conditional license revocation happens the moment DMV processes the violation report—no grace period, no advance warning, no opportunity to cure the missed term before suspension resumes.
What Triggers Automatic Revocation in Delaware

Ignition interlock violations are the most common revocation trigger. Failed breath tests above the programmed threshold, missed monthly calibration appointments, attempts to start the vehicle without providing a valid sample, and any circumvention attempt reported by the vendor all trigger automatic DMV revocation. Delaware's IID monitoring is real-time—vendors report electronically and DMV acts on those reports without manual review delay.
DUI education and treatment program violations also trigger revocation. Missing two consecutive classes, failing to complete the program within the court-ordered timeframe, or being discharged from a treatment program for noncompliance all generate violation reports to DMV. Delaware does not permit conditional license holders to pause or defer class schedules without prior court approval, and obtaining that approval after you've already missed the class does not retroactively cure the violation.
The Reinstatement Path After Revocation
Reinstating a revoked Delaware Conditional License requires completing the original underlying suspension period in full, paying the DUI reinstatement fee of $143.75, and reapplying for conditional relief if you are still eligible. If your original suspension was 12 months and you held conditional authority for 4 months before revocation, you must now serve the remaining 8 months without any driving privileges unless you qualify for a new conditional license application.
Reapplying for conditional relief after revocation is not automatic. Delaware DMV requires proof you have cured the violation that caused revocation: completion certificates for missed classes, vendor certification that your IID account is current and compliant, or documentation that you re-enrolled in a treatment program and attended the required sessions. The DMV may deny a second conditional application if the violation demonstrates you cannot comply with program terms.
Ignition interlock device vendors charge restart fees when your account is suspended for noncompliance. These fees range from $50 to $150 depending on the vendor and violation type. You must pay the restart fee, complete a recalibration appointment, and bring the account current before DMV will consider a new conditional license application. The IID period does not pause during revocation—your total IID obligation still runs from the original installation date, meaning revocation extends the calendar time you spend under monitoring without reducing the total required days.
Delaware IID Violation Reporting Window
48 hours
Ignition interlock vendors in Delaware report failed starts, missed service appointments, and circumvention attempts to the DMV within 48 hours. DMV processes these reports and updates your license status to suspended without advance notice to the driver.
Delaware Ignition Interlock Program monitoring requirements
Insurance Stays Required Even When Suspended
Your SR-22 filing obligation does not pause when your conditional license is revoked. Delaware requires continuous SR-22 coverage for the full three-year filing period measured from your DUI conviction date, regardless of whether you hold conditional driving authority, full reinstatement, or no license at all. If your policy lapses during the revocation period, DMV adds a separate insurance suspension on top of your existing DUI suspension and you will face additional reinstatement fees when you eventually apply for full license restoration.
Non-owner SR-22 policies allow suspended drivers to maintain their filing obligation without insuring a vehicle they cannot legally drive. These policies cost $25 to $50 per month in Delaware and satisfy DMV's financial responsibility requirement during the suspension period. When you regain conditional or full driving privileges, you can convert the non-owner policy to a standard auto policy or cancel it and purchase vehicle coverage separately.
Check Your Status and Act Today
Call the Delaware DMV driver services line at 302-744-2506 and provide your driver's license number to confirm your current status. If your record shows suspended, ask the representative for the suspension effective date and the specific violation code. That date tells you whether you are already revoked or whether the violation report has not yet processed.
If you are already revoked, do not drive. Driving on a suspended license in Delaware after conditional revocation is a separate criminal offense carrying up to 30 days in jail and a $500 fine for a first offense. Cure the underlying violation immediately: attend the missed class, schedule the overdue IID service appointment, or re-enroll in the treatment program. Gather documentation proving compliance and contact a Delaware license reinstatement attorney or begin the DMV reapplication process for conditional relief. Maintain your SR-22 coverage throughout—letting it lapse adds a second suspension and extends your total time off the road. If you need SR-22 coverage for a suspended license period, compare carriers writing non-owner policies in Delaware and file today.






