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Convicted driver insurance
that actually quotes you.

Quick answer

Convicted driver insurance is specialist car insurance for UK drivers with motoring convictions or penalty points — endorsement codes such as SP30 (speeding), CU80 (mobile phone use), IN10 (driving uninsured), DR10 (drink-driving) and TT99 (disqualification under totting-up). Endorsements stay on your DVLA record for four or eleven years depending on the code, but insurers typically ask about convictions from the last five years; once a conviction is spent under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act you usually no longer need to declare it. While many mainstream insurers refuse or quote punitively after a serious code, specialist underwriters price these risks daily — a single SP30 may add little, while a DR10 can multiply a premium several times. You must answer every insurer's questions truthfully: undeclared convictions void cover and count as fraud. Comparing a panel that includes convicted-driver specialists is usually the difference between a refusal and a workable quote.

DR10, IN10, TT99, SP30, CD10 — every UK conviction code is insurable, but most mainstream insurers won't even quote. We help you find specialist brokers and underwriters who will, without misrepresenting a single detail.

We work across5 categories of UK insurer
Mainstream
insurers
Convicted-driver
specialists
Telematics &
black box
Modified-car
specialists
Non-UK licence
specialists
More expensive a DR10 policy can be vs clean licence
5 yrs
Most motoring convictions spent under Rehab Act
11 yrs
DR10 stays on driving licence
100+
DVLA endorsement codes specialist insurers cover

UK conviction codes and their impact on car insurance

Different conviction codes affect insurance premiums very differently. Here's how the most common UK motoring convictions are priced.

CodeOffenceTypical premium impactMust declare for
SP30Speeding on a public road+10% to +25%5 years
SP50Speeding on motorway+10% to +30%5 years
CU80Mobile phone while driving+25% to +50%5 years
IN10Driving uninsured+50% to +100%5 years
DR10Drink driving (over the limit)+50% to +400%, often refused by mainstream5 years (stays on licence 11)
DR20Drink driving (unfit through drink)Mainstream typically refuse; specialist only5 years (stays on licence 11)
TT99Totting up (12+ points)+100% or more; specialist only4 years from conviction
CD10–CD80Careless or inconsiderate driving+30% to +100%5 years

Source: Association of British Insurers (ABI) market data and DVLA disclosure rules. Premium impact ranges are typical for first-offence drivers with no other claims; actual quotes vary by insurer, vehicle, age and postcode.

Why mainstream insurers won't quote you

If you have an unspent motoring conviction on your licence, comparison sites and mainstream insurers will often return either no quote at all, or a quote that's so high it's effectively a rejection. This isn't because insurance is impossible — it's because mainstream panels are built for low-risk profiles.

Specialist brokers and underwriters exist precisely for drivers in your situation. They have access to insurance schemes that mainstream comparison sites don't show.

The conviction codes that affect insurance most

UK driving convictions are recorded as endorsement codes by the DVLA. Each code carries a different insurance impact. The most common:

CodeMeaningPointsStays on licence
SP30Exceeding speed limit on public road3–64 years
SP50Exceeding speed limit on motorway3–64 years
CD10Driving without due care and attention3–94 years
CD20Driving without reasonable consideration for others3–94 years
DR10Driving with alcohol above the limit3–1111 years
DR20Driving while unfit through drink3–1111 years
DR40In charge of vehicle while above alcohol limit1011 years
DG10Driving with drug levels above the specified limit3–1111 years
IN10Using vehicle uninsured against third-party risks6–84 years
TT99Disqualification (totting up 12+ points)4 years

The "spent conviction" rule that saves you money

Most motoring convictions are spent after 5 years under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, even if the points stay on your licence longer. Once a conviction is spent, you have no legal obligation to declare it to insurers — even if they ask.

The exception is drink and drug driving (DR and DG codes), which have longer rehabilitation periods. But even these become spent after 5 years for sentences under 6 months — which most are.

If your conviction is spent, declaring it anyway costs you money. Always check before you renew.

How to lower your convicted driver premium

1. Use a specialist broker, not a comparison site

Specialist brokers have access to underwriter panels that mainstream comparison sites don't carry. They quote drivers with convictions every day. Our quote partner aggregates these specialists alongside the mainstream panel — so you see the full picture in one place.

2. Consider telematics

Several specialist insurers offer black-box policies for convicted drivers. Demonstrating safe driving over 12 months can dramatically reduce future premiums.

3. Check whether your conviction is spent

If it is, stop declaring it. Many drivers continue to declare spent convictions out of habit, costing themselves hundreds of pounds a year.

4. Pay annually, not monthly

Monthly direct debits carry effective interest of 20–25%. If you can pay annually, do.

5. Increase your voluntary excess

For convicted drivers, raising the voluntary excess from £100 to £500 can cut premiums significantly.

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Convicted driver insurance FAQs

Can I get car insurance with a DR10?

Yes. Mainstream insurers often won't quote drivers with a DR10 (drink driving), but specialist brokers work with underwriters who actively cover convicted drivers. Our quote partner's panel includes those specialists.

Premiums are higher than for a clean licence — typically 1.5x to 5x — but cover is available, and the gap closes the longer you go without further convictions.

How long does a DR10 affect my insurance?

A DR10 stays on your driving licence for 11 years from the conviction date. However, the conviction itself is considered "spent" under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act after 5 years (assuming the sentence was under 6 months — which most DR10s are).

Once spent, you do not have to declare it to most insurers, even if they ask. This often catches people out — they assume "still on the licence" means "still declarable." It doesn't.

Do I need to declare spent convictions?

No. Once a conviction is spent under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974, you have no legal obligation to declare it — even if directly asked. Most motoring convictions are spent after 5 years from the conviction date.

What is TT99?

TT99 is the DVLA code for "totting up": accumulating 12 or more penalty points within 3 years, which results in disqualification. It is one of the most serious endorsement codes for insurance purposes — many mainstream insurers will not quote a driver with a TT99 at all.

Will telling the insurer void my policy if my conviction is spent?

No — declaring a spent conviction unnecessarily doesn't void anything, it just costs you more. The risk runs the other way: failing to declare an unspent conviction will void your policy. When in doubt, check whether the conviction is spent first using gov.uk's spent convictions calculator.

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