You know your license is suspended, but you have to get to work. The kids need to get to school. You have a doctor’s appointment. So you take the risk, just this once, just for essential trips, just until you can get your license back.
Then you see blue lights in your rearview mirror.
Driving on a suspended license in Virginia isn’t just a traffic violation or another fine to pay—it’s a criminal offense that can land you in jail, extend your suspension, result in your vehicle being impounded, and create a cascade of consequences that take years to resolve.
What started as a suspended license for a traffic violation has now become a criminal record, thousands of dollars in additional fines and fees, possible jail time, and an even longer road to getting your driving privileges back.
Let’s be clear about what you’re facing and why taking that “quick trip” creates far more problems than it solves.
The Bottom Line: It’s a Crime, Not Just a Ticket
Class 1 Misdemeanor (Driving on a Suspended License After a Suspension Through Anything but DUI):
- Up to 12 months in jail
- Up to $2,500 fine
- Additional license suspension period
- Possible vehicle impoundment
- Criminal record (affects employment, housing, background checks)
Class 6 Felony (Third Conviction After a DUI Suspension or After a Felony DUI)
- 1-5 years in prison (or 12 months jail at judge’s discretion)
- Up to $2,500 fine
- Mandatory additional license suspension
- Vehicle forfeiture possible
- Permanent felony record
How Licenses Get Suspended in Virginia (More Ways Than You Think)
Virginia suspends driver’s licenses for numerous reasons, and many people are suspended without fully realizing it:
Traffic-Related Suspensions
DUI/DWI conviction: Automatic 12-month suspension (first offense); longer for subsequent offenses
Reckless driving conviction: Court may suspend license for up to 6 months depending on severity
Accumulating too many DMV points: 18 points in 12 months triggers 90-day suspension; 24 points in 24 months also triggers suspension
Multiple traffic violations: Pattern of unsafe driving even without hitting point thresholds
Exhibition Driving: Purposely spinning wheels or allowing someone to ride on the roof or hood of a motor vehicle.
Administrative Suspensions
No insurance: Driving without valid insurance results in immediate suspension; Virginia DMV notified electronically by insurance companies when policies lapse
Failure to pay court-ordered child support: DMV suspends license until child support payments brought current
Medical conditions: Doctor reports or DMV medical review determines you’re unsafe to drive (vision problems, seizures, certain medications)
Drug-related conviction (even non-driving): Simple possession or drug charges trigger 6-month license suspension even if you weren’t driving
Zero tolerance violations (under 21): Any detectable alcohol while driving under age 21 triggers suspension
The “I Didn’t Know” Defense Doesn’t Work
Here’s how suspension works in Virginia:
- DMV mails suspension notice to the address on your driver’s license
- If you moved and didn’t update your address with DMV, the notice goes to your old address
- You never receive it
- Your license is suspended anyway
- You drive, thinking everything is fine
- Police pull you over, discover suspension
- You’re arrested and charged with driving on suspended license
Virginia law is harsh: Ignorance is not a defense. You are legally responsible for keeping your license current and knowing its status. “I never got the letter” won’t help you in court.
Why People Take the Risk (And Why It’s Still a Bad Idea)
We understand the temptations and rationalizations:
“I need to get to work. I’ll lose my job if I don’t drive.” This is the most common reason, and it’s genuinely difficult. But if you are charged with driving on a suspended license you may lose your job when you’re in jail or dealing with court dates.
“How will they know? I’ll just be careful.” Police don’t need a reason to run your license plate. Automated license plate readers (ALPRs) can potentially flag suspended licenses. A routine traffic stop for a broken taillight may reveal your suspended status.
“I only drive for essential trips like work, groceries, emergencies.” Virginia law doesn’t have an exception for “essential” driving. One mile or 100 miles, work or pleasure, it’s the same crime.
“I can’t afford to take time off work to deal with reinstatement.” Taking one day off to handle reinstatement properly costs far less than the potential consequences of driving on suspended license: jail time, criminal record, extended suspension, impoundment fees, attorney fees, higher insurance.
What Actually Happens When You Get Caught
Here’s the reality of getting pulled over while driving on a suspended license:
The Traffic Stop
The officer pulls you over for any reason—speeding, routine checkpoint, or simply running your plate through the system.
License Check
The officer asks for license and registration. You hand over your license. The officer returns to the patrol car and runs your information through the DMV database.
Within seconds, the officer sees: Your license is suspended, the reason for suspension, when the suspension began and any outstanding warrants.
Impound
There may be times that your vehicle can be impounded for driving on a suspended license. This may result in towing and impounding fees. If you can’t afford to retrieve it within a few days, fees accumulate rapidly.
You and your passengers may be stranded on the side of the road.
Court Process
:You may need to go to court multiple times before your case is resolved. Depending on the circumstances surrounding the suspension or revocation of your license, driving on a suspended license may result in significant jail time, further license suspension, or even a felony conviction.
The Compounding Effect: How One Charge Creates Multiple Problems
Driving on a suspended license doesn’t just add one charge—it cascades into multiple consequences:
Your Suspension Gets Extended
The court may add additional suspension time to your existing suspension. Your path to license restoration just got longer.
A conviction for driving on a suspended license can result in further suspension of 90 days to 12 months.
Additional Criminal Charge and Record
You now have a criminal conviction (if found guilty). This may appear on:
- Background checks for employment
- Professional license applications
- College applications
- Security clearance reviews
More Fines and Fees
- Criminal fines
- Court costs
- Impound and towing fees
- Reinstatement fee (again)
- SR-22 insurance costs
- Attorney fees
Insurance Catastrophe
Once you finally get your license back, you may need SR-22 high-risk insurance which can be significantly more expensive than typical insurance rates.
Employment Consequences
Many jobs require a valid driver’s license: Delivery drivers, sales representatives, home healthcare workers, service technicians, rideshare drivers, may lose their jobs.
Criminal record affects hiring: Even on jobs that don’t require driving conduct background checks, a criminal conviction raises red flags.
CDL holders: Commercial drivers face federal disqualification rules. One driving on a suspended license conviction can end a trucking career.
The Cycle Continues
Can’t get license back → Can’t get to work → Lose job → Can’t pay reinstatement fees → Can’t get license back → Drive anyway out of desperation → Get caught again → Situation worsens.
Virginia-Specific Rules That Make It Challenging
DMV Notification
Virginia DMV mails suspension notices to the address on your driver’s license. If you’ve moved and didn’t update your address within 30 days (as required by law), you won’t receive the notice, but your license is still suspended.
Check your license status online at Virginia DMV website: dmv.virginia.gov. Ignorance is not a defense.
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Interstate Compact
Virginia participates in the Interstate Driver’s License Compact. If you’re a Maryland resident with a Virginia suspended license, Maryland will likely suspend your license too once Virginia reports the suspension.
You can’t escape Virginia suspensions by using an out-of-state license.
Getting Your License Back: The Restoration Process
Restoring your license requires satisfying every condition of your suspension:
Steps to Reinstatement
- Serve the full suspension period. No shortcuts. If suspended for 12 months, you must wait 12 months.
- Pay all outstanding fines and court costs. Every traffic ticket, court cost, and DMV fee must be paid in full.
- Complete required programs:
- ASAP (Alcohol Safety Action Program) if DUI-related
- Driver improvement clinic if point-related
- Any court-ordered classes or community service
- Obtain SR-22 insurance. High-risk insurance filing required for 3 years (minimum) after DUI, serious violations, or driving on suspended.
- Pay reinstatement fee: $145 if not DUI-related; $220 if DUI-related.
- Pass any required tests. Some suspensions require retaking written and/or driving tests.
Timeline Reality
From the day your license is suspended to full restoration typically takes:
- DUI: 12+ months
- Points accumulation: 6-12 months
Add time for any driving on suspended license convictions, and restoration can take years.
Restricted Licenses and Work Permits: Limited Relief
Virginia offers restricted licenses for some (not all) suspensions, allowing limited driving for essential purposes.
Who Qualifies
May qualify for restricted license:
- DUI suspension (after mandatory non-restricted period)
- Points suspension
- Some administrative suspensions
Do NOT qualify:
- Multiple DUI offenses (until conditions met)
- Certain medical suspensions
What Restricted License Allows
- Driving to and from work
- Driving during work hours (if job requires)
- Driving to ASAP classes or court-ordered programs
- Medical appointments
- Educational activities
- Religious services (in some cases)
Hours and routes may be restricted. Violation of restrictions = new driving on suspended license charge.
Requirements for Restricted License
- Install ignition interlock device (if DUI-related)
- Obtain SR-22 insurance
- Pay restricted license fee
- Prove legitimate need (employment letter, school enrollment, etc.)
- Complete ASAP enrollment (if DUI-related)
Getting a restricted license takes time: Enrollment in programs, gathering documentation, DMV processing. Plan for 4-8 weeks.
Defense Strategies: How Attorneys Fight These Charges
While driving on suspended license is difficult to defend (you either had a valid license or you didn’t), experienced attorneys have strategies:
Challenge the Basis of the Stop
If the police did not have a valid reason for the traffic stop, you may be able to get the charge dismissed.
Emergency Exception
If you were driving due to a genuine emergency (rushing a critically ill person to hospital, fleeing immediate danger), courts may consider this mitigating circumstance.
Negotiate Reduction
Experienced attorneys may negotiate with prosecutors to:
- Reduce charge to lesser offense
- Recommend suspended sentence with probation instead of active jail time
- Allow work-release during any jail sentence
- Structure payment plans for fines
Show Steps Toward Compliance
If you’ve already started the reinstatement process (enrolled in ASAP, paid some fines, obtained SR-22), showing good faith effort may result in more lenient sentencing.
What to Do If You’re Charged
- Don’t drive again until you have a valid license. Seriously. Uber, Lyft, friends, family, bicycle, bus—anything but driving. A second charge makes everything exponentially worse.
- Hire an attorney immediately. Driving on a suspended license is criminal. You need a criminal defense attorney who handles these cases regularly.
- Begin reinstatement process now. Even while criminal case is pending, start:
- Paying fines
- Enrolling in required programs
- Obtaining SR-22 insurance quotes
- Gathering documentation
- Explore transportation alternatives. Research public transit, carpools, rideshare, work-from-home options. Show the court you’re serious about not driving.
- Document everything. Keep records of payments made, programs enrolled, transportation arrangements. This helps your attorney negotiate.
We Can Help Navigate This Complicated Situation
At Decker Law, we’ve defended thousands of clients charged with driving on a suspended license in Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, and throughout Hampton Roads.
We help clients:
- Challenge invalid suspensions
- Negotiate charge reductions
- Minimize jail time and fines
- Navigate DMV reinstatement process
- Obtain restricted licenses when possible
- Explore first-offender programs
Don’t let one mistake compound into years of problems. Let us help you resolve the criminal charge and get back on the road legally.
Call Decker Law at 757-622-3317 to schedule your free consultation. We’ll review your specific situation, why your license was suspended, the circumstances of your arrest, your driving history, and your employment needs, and give you honest advice about your options.
Decker Law • Norfolk, Virginia • 757-622-3317
Criminal Defense attorneys throughout Hampton Roads, including Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Hampton, and Newport News.











