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DUI & DWI Defense Attorneys
Find experienced DUI and DWI defense attorneys near you. Compare verified profiles, read client reviews, and consult about your case for free.
26.587 DUI / DWI Defense attorneys listed on AttorneyQnA
A DUI or DWI charge can cost you your driver’s license, your job, and thousands of dollars in fines and insurance hikes. An experienced DUI/DWI defense attorney evaluates the traffic stop, the field sobriety test, and the breathalyzer or blood draw for procedural errors that can reduce charges, get evidence thrown out, or beat the case at trial. Every state defines impaired driving differently, and the consequences scale fast with prior offenses, refusal, or aggravating factors like an accident.
What does a DUI / DWI lawyer do?
A DUI defense attorney protects you at every stage — from the DMV license hearing to plea negotiation to jury trial. Common services include:
Reviewing dashcam, body-camera, and arrest reports for unlawful stops or rights violations
Challenging breathalyzer calibration records and blood-test chain-of-custody
Cross-examining the arresting officer about field sobriety test administration
Negotiating reduced charges (wet reckless, reckless driving) when appropriate
Representing you at the administrative license suspension hearing within the short statutory deadline
Arguing for diversion, deferred adjudication, or first-offender programs that avoid a conviction record
Penalties you may be facing
Even a first-offense DUI typically carries license suspension, mandatory alcohol education, ignition-interlock installation, fines, and the possibility of jail. A second or third offense, or a DUI involving injury, can mean felony charges, prison time, and a permanent record.
When to hire a DUI lawyer
You were arrested for DUI, DWI, OUI, OWI, or a related impaired-driving offense
Your license is at risk of administrative suspension and the hearing deadline is days away
The case involves an accident, injury, child passenger, or commercial driver license
You have a prior DUI within the lookback period of your state
You refused the breath, blood, or urine test
Most DUI defense attorneys offer a free initial consultation. Acting quickly preserves evidence, protects your license, and gives your lawyer time to build a real defense before the first court date.
Most private DUI defense attorneys charge between $1,500 and $5,000 for a first-offense misdemeanor case that resolves with a plea. Trial fees, expert witnesses, and multiple-offense or felony cases typically cost more. Many lawyers offer payment plans and free initial consultations so you can budget realistically before retaining counsel.
Should I plead guilty if I failed the breathalyzer?
Not without talking to a defense lawyer first. Breathalyzers must be calibrated, maintained, and administered following strict protocols, and operator or device errors can render the result inadmissible. A defense attorney can subpoena maintenance logs and challenge the result before you concede a conviction.
Will a DUI stay on my record forever?
In most states a DUI conviction remains on your criminal record permanently unless you qualify for expungement, sealing, or pardon. The conviction also stays on your driving record for 5 to 10 years (sometimes lifetime) for license-point purposes. A lawyer can advise you on post-conviction relief options.
Do I really need a lawyer for a first-offense DUI?
Yes. A first DUI carries license suspension, mandatory alcohol education, fines, and a criminal conviction that follows you into employment background checks. A first-offense conviction also dramatically escalates penalties for any future DUI. The cost of representation is almost always less than the long-term cost of conviction.
What is the difference between DUI and DWI?
They are labels for the same underlying conduct — driving while impaired — but states use different acronyms. Some states (Texas, New York) call it DWI; others (California, Florida) use DUI. A few states use both with different meanings (e.g. DWI for alcohol, DUI for drugs). Your lawyer will know which statute applies to your case.
Can I refuse a breathalyzer test?
Legally you can refuse, but every state has an “implied consent” law that imposes an automatic license suspension for refusal — often longer than the suspension for failing the test. Refusal can also be introduced as evidence at trial. Whether to refuse is a tactical decision that depends on your priors and the specific facts.