California car insurance for registration — minimums, lapse & SR-22
In California, car insurance and vehicle registration are tied together: the state requires you to carry financial responsibility for every registered vehicle, verifies it electronically with your insurer, and suspends the registration if it detects a lapse. This cluster covers the coverage minimums, how verification works, what a lapse triggers, and how to clear a suspension.
The most important number changed recently. As of January 1, 2025, California’s minimum liability limits are 30/60/15 — higher than the limits that applied for decades. If you’re relying on an older policy or an old rule of thumb, check that it meets the current minimum.
What the law requires — and what happens if you lapse
The coverage minimums, how the DMV verifies them, and the consequences of a gap.
- $30,000 for injury or death of one person
- $60,000 for injury or death of more than one person
- $15,000 for property damage
- These limits (30/60/15) took effect January 1, 2025 under SB 1107; a further increase to 50/100/25 is scheduled for 2035 (Vehicle Code §16430)
- Insurers report your policy to the DMV electronically, and terminations too, so the DMV usually already knows you're covered (Vehicle Code §16058)
- That's the DMV side only — by law you must still carry evidence of insurance in the vehicle and show it to an officer on request (§16020 / §16028)
- Electronic verification does not replace carrying your proof — don't drive without it
- The DMV suspends your registration if it gets no insurance within 30 days of issuing a registration card, or if a cancellation isn't replaced within 45 days (Vehicle Code §4000.38)
- While suspended, the vehicle may not be driven or parked on public roads until you clear it
- Clearing it takes proof of insurance plus a $14 reinstatement fee — see below
- An SR-22 isn't insurance — it's a certificate your insurer files with the DMV confirming you carry at least the minimum coverage, typically required after certain violations. The forms come in owner, operator, and broad-coverage versions
- California also lets qualifying fleet owners self-insure through a cash deposit or surety bond instead of a policy; the DMV sets the requirements
How to clear an insurance suspension
The short version — the full walkthrough is in reinstate a suspended registration.
Related sub-topics
Other clusters in the vehicle registration pillar.
How these connect to the rest of the DMV system
Frequently asked questions
Comparison and definitional — to help you pick the right type.