"Letting a teenager drive is scary enough for any parent.
Add in the parents’ car that the teen is driving on the family’s auto
insurance policy, and you might not get any sleep at night. Throw in a
DUI, and it’s a nightmare.
A DUI or DWI — police terms for driving under the
influence or driving while intoxicated — is a “scarlet letter” to auto
insurers, says Troy Thompson, owner of Pinnacle
Insurance Agency in Coon Rapids, Minn. Half of the companies Thompson
works with will drop an entire family if their teen has a DUI, he says.
“They don’t want to be anywhere near someone in a household with a DUI,” Thompson says.
If an insurer does keep the family policy, parents with such a teen will likely see their rates double or triple, he says.
Two types of policies
A teen’s auto insurance rate depends on whose policy
they’re on — their own or their parents — and if the teen owns a car.
Using a parent’s car on a family auto insurance policy is a lot cheaper
than doing it on your own.
A family policy can cost about $100 per month and will
rise to $200 after a DUI, while a teen with their own policy will pay up
to $500 per month and could see their rate go up to $800 per month,
Thompson says. “No policy is cheap when you have a 16-year-old,” he
says.
When the teen turns 18, they can stay on the parents’
policy as long as they live in the house, he says. But after moving out
or having a vehicle in their name, they must have their own insurance,
he says.
If the teen has their own insurance policy because they
own a car that’s in their name, then they’ll face an “astronomical” rate
increase after a DUI, Thompson says. Families and insurance agents
don’t always put a car that’s in a kid’s name on the kid’s insurance
policy, he says, but it should be.
"You can’t insure somebody Else vehicle if you don’t
have any skin in the game with that vehicle,” Thompson says, meaning
your name on the title.
An easy solution: Don’t let teens drive your car
The best course for parents to avoid a teen’s DUI
from affecting their insurance premium on the family car is to not have
the teen on their policy, says John R. O’Brien, a Chicago attorney who
has represented DUI defendants. The teens can still drive the family
car, and the family's insurance policy will cover them as it would
anyone who drivers it with the owner's permission, O'Brien says. The
teens' driving records won't impact the parents' premiums, he says.
“Parents are routinely talked into putting their teen
drivers on the policy for the family car by agents who get commissions
based on the amount of the premium paid — which goes up dramatically
when a teen driver is added,” O’Brien says. That money would better be
spend on their kids’ education, he says.
Other expensive problems after DUI
Higher insurance rates are just the start of a teen’s
problems for driving drunk. California, for example, has a “zero
tolerance” law that forbids anyone under 21 from driving with a blood
alcohol level of .01 percent or greater, says Christopher McCann,
a criminal defense attorney in Southern California. It can be charged
as an infraction with a $70 fine and up to $400 in penalty assessments.
That can lead to the Department of Motor Vehicles
suspending a teen’s driver’s license for one year, or delayed for a year
if they haven’t applied for it yet, McCann says. The court may order
the teen to participate in an alcohol program.
With higher blood alcohol levels of .05 percent or more, a teen can also be fined $100 and face $500 in penalties.
When the blood alcohol level reaches .08 percent or
more, whether a teen or adult, the penalty in California for a DUI
conviction includes three years of informal probation, $2,000 in fines
and penalties, completion of a 30-hour DUI program costing $500, and up
to six months in jail, McCann says. Most offenders aren’t jailed, he
says, but may perform community service. Teens may be ordered to attend
“scared straight” programs at the county morgue and hospital.
A DUI conviction in California will also lead to two
points on a driving record. DUI offenders under 18 may also be ordered
to appear in juvenile traffic court with a parent, and while not
typically arrested, their car will be impounded and towed, leading to
large storage fees, he says.
Teens caught driving drunk are usually released to their
parents without bail, but the parent will be ordered to appear in court
with the minor, and the parent can be subjected to criminal charges if
they fail to do so, McCann says. Failure to comply may lead to the child
being removed from their custody.
For teens ages 18-19 who are arrested for DUI, like most
adult offenders, they’ll typically be released from jail many hours
later after they’ve sobered up without having to post bail, but they’ll
have to appear in court later, McCann says. Many counties in California
require $2,500 in bail if the offender isn’t released on their own
recognizance, he says.
Some good news
There are two ways to get a DUI conviction off an
insurance policy: Have the teen move out of the house and get their own
insurance, when the parents can prove their child will no longer be
driving their car; or waiting five years for the conviction to be
removed from their record.
Laws vary
by state, and some states allow a DUI conviction to affect sentencing
for another crime for up to 20 years. Taking an alcohol education class
can help get a DUI removed from a record sooner.
A DUI can also affect the ability to get a job.
“Employers can ask for a motor vehicle record, and they definitely will
if you have to drive a company car,” says Lisa Radov, owner of Gebco
Insurance Associates in Maryland. Teachers can have their teaching
license suspended or taken away, or may no longer be able to teach at a
public school after getting a DUI, Radov says.
“Getting a DUI can cost you big time, and hurt you with
your career,” she says. “It isn’t worth getting in an accident, hurting
someone else, or going to jail and getting it on your record while your
insurance rates will skyrocket.”
“The lesson here is to just not drive while under the
influence and you won’t have to deal with the headache for years of
dealing with the consequences,” Radov says."
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