Probationary License Insurance — Wyoming

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5/30/2026 · 7 min read · Published by Probationary License Insurance

You Cannot Apply Until the Hard Suspension Ends

You received a DUI conviction in Wyoming yesterday. You need to drive to work Monday morning. You search for Wyoming Probationary License application instructions and find forms on the Wyoming Driver Services website. You download the forms, gather your employment verification letter, and prepare to submit—but the application will be rejected. Wyoming law requires a mandatory 90-day hard suspension period before a Probationary License becomes available for first-offense DUI convictions. That period starts from your conviction date, not your filing date. Applying before the 90 days expire wastes your time and the $50 application fee.

The hard suspension period is not discretionary. Wyoming Statute 31-5-233 locks this window for all DUI-related administrative per se suspensions. Second and subsequent offenses carry longer hard suspension periods—sometimes 18 months or more—before restricted driving eligibility opens. Wyoming Driver Services does not process early applications or place them in a queue. Your application arrives, gets denied, and you start over when the eligibility window actually opens.

Applying before the 90-day hard suspension ends triggers a denial, wastes the $50 fee, and resets your timeline.

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Wyoming DUI Hard Suspension

90 days

First-offense DUI administrative per se suspensions in Wyoming require a mandatory 90-day hard suspension period before Probationary License eligibility opens, measured from the conviction date. Second offenses extend to 18 months.

Wyoming Statute 31-5-233

The Probationary License Is Not a Hardship Bypass

Wyoming's Probationary License is not a general hardship relief program available to anyone suspended for any cause. It is a DUI-specific and points-specific restricted driving pathway administered through Wyoming Driver Services. The program allows driving for work, school, medical appointments, and other essential needs—but only after the hard suspension period ends, only with ignition interlock device installation, and only with SR-22 insurance filing maintained continuously.

Most suspended drivers assume hardship means financial hardship or job-loss hardship. Wyoming's program defines hardship differently: it assumes you have already served the mandatory suspension period, demonstrated compliance with court-ordered DUI education and treatment programs, and secured an approved ignition interlock vendor. The Probationary License is the pathway back to legal driving under strict supervision—not a workaround for the suspension itself.

Wyoming does not offer Probationary License eligibility for unpaid-fines suspensions, child support arrears suspensions, or failure-to-appear suspensions with the same procedural clarity it applies to DUI and points-related cases. If your suspension stems from uninsured driving, you face a different reinstatement pathway: proof of insurance (SR-22 filing required) and payment of the $50 reinstatement fee, but no Probationary License application process. The restricted driving pathway exists only where statute explicitly allows it.

Applying before the 90-day hard suspension ends does not place you in a queue—it triggers a denial, wastes the $50 fee, and resets your timeline.

What the Probationary License Application Actually Requires

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Wyoming Driver Services processes Probationary License applications through its Cheyenne headquarters office. No online portal exists for this transaction. You submit by mail or in person with a complete documentation packet.

The required documentation includes: proof of need (employment verification letter on employer letterhead, school enrollment confirmation, or medical appointment schedule), proof of SR-22 insurance filing (the SR-22 certificate must be filed electronically by your carrier directly with Wyoming Driver Services before you submit the application), completed Probationary License application form available from wyoleg.gov or the Driver Services office, proof of ignition interlock device installation (installation confirmation from an approved Wyoming IID vendor), and the $50 application fee. Additional documentation may be required depending on your specific suspension type—court orders, treatment program enrollment confirmation, or restitution payment receipts for DUI-related suspensions.

Processing time is not guaranteed. Wyoming is the least populous state; Driver Services operates with limited staffing. Real-world processing for complex multi-action suspensions (for example, simultaneous DUI and uninsured driving suspensions stacked together) can extend beyond the typical administrative turnaround window. Incomplete applications are returned without processing, and the $50 fee is not refunded. If your SR-22 filing lapses during the application review period, the application is denied and you restart the entire process after refiling SR-22 and waiting for confirmation from your carrier.

The Ignition Interlock Requirement Is Not Optional

Wyoming Statute 31-5-233 requires ignition interlock device installation as a condition of the Probationary License for all DUI-related suspensions. This is not a recommendation or a discretionary requirement your attorney can negotiate away. The IID must be installed by an approved Wyoming vendor before you submit your Probationary License application. The installation confirmation document is required in your application packet.

Ignition interlock vendors charge installation fees (typically $75–$150), monthly monitoring fees (typically $60–$90), and calibration fees every 30–60 days. Total IID cost over a 3-year Probationary License period runs $2,500–$4,000. The vendor reports your compliance data to Wyoming Driver Services monthly. Tampering with the device, failing calibration appointments, or recording failed breath tests triggers automatic Probationary License revocation without warning.

Wyoming administers the ignition interlock program through Driver Services, not through the court system. Your court order may reference IID as a probation condition, but the Probationary License IID requirement is a separate administrative obligation. You must satisfy both. If your probation term ends before your Probationary License period expires, you still maintain the IID until Driver Services closes your file. Removing the device early revokes your restricted driving privilege and restarts your suspension period from zero.

Wyoming Reinstatement Fee Per Suspension

$50

Wyoming charges $50 per suspension action. A driver with stacked suspensions—for example, DUI plus uninsured driving—owes $100 in reinstatement fees before full license restoration. Probationary License approval does not waive these fees.

Wyoming Driver Services fee schedule

SR-22 Filing Runs for Three Years Minimum

Wyoming requires SR-22 filing for DUI convictions, uninsured accident violations, and certain point-threshold suspensions. The filing period runs 3 years from the date your carrier files the SR-22 certificate electronically with Wyoming Driver Services, not from your conviction date or suspension start date. If your SR-22 filing lapses at any point during the 3-year period—because you missed a payment, switched carriers without coordinating the SR-22 transfer, or let your policy cancel—Wyoming Driver Services receives an SR-26 cancellation notice from your previous carrier. The cancellation notice triggers automatic Probationary License revocation and suspension reinstatement.

SR-22 is not a separate insurance policy. It is a certificate your auto insurance carrier files with the state confirming you carry at least Wyoming's minimum liability limits: $25,000 bodily injury per person, $50,000 bodily injury per accident, and $20,000 property damage. Carriers writing SR-22 in Wyoming include Dairyland, Geico, Progressive, The General, Bristol West, National General, and State Farm. Not all carriers write SR-22 for all driver profiles. Non-standard carriers like Dairyland, Bristol West, and The General specialize in post-DUI coverage and typically quote lower premiums for high-risk drivers than standard carriers.

Compare SR-22 Carriers Before Filing

SR-22 premium ranges in Wyoming run $85–$210 per month for minimum liability coverage after a first-offense DUI, depending on age, county, and carrier. Cheyenne and Casper zip codes typically quote higher than rural counties due to accident frequency and vehicle theft rates. Laramie County SR-22 rates run 15–25% higher than Sublette County rates for identical driver profiles. Shopping one carrier wastes money. Compare at least three quotes from carriers writing SR-22 in Wyoming before committing.

Probationary License approval does not reduce your SR-22 premium. The filing requirement and the restricted driving privilege are separate administrative actions. Your premium reflects your violation history, your county's risk profile, and your carrier's underwriting model for post-DUI drivers. Maintaining continuous SR-22 coverage without lapses for the full 3-year period is the only pathway to full license reinstatement and eventual premium reduction. Missing payments, letting coverage cancel, or switching carriers without coordinating SR-22 transfer extends your filing period and delays reinstatement indefinitely.

Frequently Asked Questions