DUI in Nevada (NRS 484C) – 2025 Guide to Charges, Penalties, Defenses & DMV

NRS 484C.110; NRS 484C.120; NRS 484C.400

Summary: Nevada prosecutes DUI two ways—impairment or “per-se” chemical levels measured within two hours of driving (0.08% BAC for most drivers; 0.04% for commercial). This page explains elements, penalties (with 2025 updates), DMV consequences, winning defenses, and what to do next.

What counts as DUI in Nevada?

Under NRS Chapter 484C, you can be convicted if the State proves that you were in actual physical control of a motor vehicle upon a premises to which the public had access AND any of the following:

  • Per-se theory (“two-hour rule”): Within two hours of driving/actual control, your chemical test hit the statutory limit (for most adults 0.08% BAC; 0.04% for commercial drivers; above a threshold amount for certain street drugs like cocaine, methamphetamine, etc).
  • Impairment theory: You drove (or were in actual physical control) on a highway or public premises while impaired by alcohol and/or drugs (including some prescription drugs); or
  • Above Point .08 or more at the time of driving: This theory is more rare because it request the prosecutor to take two blood draws an hour a part and then use math to try to prove what your BAC was at the time you were driving.

“Actual physical control” doesn’t always mean the car was moving. Nevada statutes and case law look at totality of circumstances (e.g., location, keys, engine status, intent). There are statutory safe-harbor scenarios where a parked driver is not in APC.

Offense (within 7 years)LevelJail/ConfinementFinesTreatment/Other
1st offenseMisdemeanorAt least 2 days jail but not more than 6 months or 48–96 hrs community service (or residential confinement).$400–$1,000, with the minimum fine dependent on the court the case is filed in.DUI school and a victim impact panel; treatment if BAC ≥ 0.16 (2025); BIID ordered typically as a condition of driving privileges being reinstated.
2nd offense (through 9/30/2025)Misdemeanor10 days–6 months jail or residential confinement.$750–$1,000 (or equivalent community service)The same as above but a mandatory chemical dependency analysis
2nd offense (on/after 10/1/2025)Misdemeanor20 days–6 months jail or residential confinement$750–$1,000 (or equivalent community service)The same as a first offense but a mandatory chemical dependency analysis
3rd offenseCategory B felony1–6 years prison (no probation per statute except narrow treatment exceptions like admission into the felony DUI court)$2,000–$5,000May include treatment if appropriate as part of felony DUI court.
DUI causing injury/death (NRS 484C.430)Category B felony2–20 years prison; no probation$2,000–$5,000A breath interlock required for 12-36 months upon release from prison.
DUI with a prior felony offenseCategory B felony2-15 years prison; no probation$2,000-$5,000A breath interlock required for 12-36 months upon release from prison.
Vehicular Homicide (DUI causing death with 3 prior offenses)Category A felony10 years to life in prison or 10-25 years in prison.N/AN/A

Defenses That Often Work

  • No APC / “Parked & Safe” defense – If the facts fit Nevada’s APC safe-harbor (e.g., legally parked, engine off, no intent to drive), we can potentially move to dismiss.
  • Illegal stop or detention – If the stop lacked reasonable suspicion or the detention expanded unlawfully, all downstream evidence (FSTs, statements, breath/blood) can be suppressed.
  • Breath test protocol errors – Nevada uses Intoxilyzer 8000 with a mandatory 15-minute observation and calibration/checklist steps. Any miss (mouth alcohol, burp/regurgitation, radio interference, temperature, maintenance gaps) undermines the result. We obtain maintenance & operator logs and the full checklist.
  • Blood draw & lab issues – Anticoagulant/preservative problems, fermentation, chain-of-custody, lab uncertainty, and timing can create reasonable doubt.
  • Drug DUI gaps – For impairment-based drug DUIs (not per-se limits), the State must tie the substance to actual impairment; DRE methodology and metabolite results (if based upon prescription drugs and not drugs set forth in the drug table of NRS 484C.110) are heavily contestable.
  • Two-hour rule & rising BAC – If timing is outside two hours or the test doesn’t reflect BAC at driving, the per-se theory can fail on alcohol based cases.
  • Necessity/duress – Extremely rare but viable in select fact patterns (e.g., medical emergencies).

Process & Strategy

Generally speaking, the process proceeds as follows. First, there’s the initial appearance in court. In the even of a breath test, charges are usually filed immediately and the case is either set for a status check on discovery or set for trial so that a prosecutor can be assigned to the case to send discovery. If you chose blood, this process is usually delayed until the blood test results are back from the lab. Once discovery is received, you will go over it with your attorney to talk about what’s good, bad, and in the middle about your case. From there, negotiations begin with the prosecutor to see if there is any potential resolution. Once the prosecutor makes their final offer as part of the negotiation process, you’ll go over that offer with your attorney and be provided all of the information you need to make the choice that’s best for you. Whether that is trial or entering into a plea bargain, that choice is yours and yours alone. If you decide to plead, then you will be sentenced immediately unless there’s a chemical dependency analysis required based upon your BAC or by statute if this is not your first offense. If you decide not to plead, then trial will proceed with any motions challenging the evidence in the case likely being heard the day of trial. Parallel to this is the DMV proceedings that can be used to attack the criminal case based upon the cross examination of the arresting officer.

DMV Consequences (Separate from Court)

  • Revocation lengths: 185 days (first), 1 year (second), 3 years (third). These run through the DMV regardless of the outcome in criminal court, unless you win the DMV hearing. Additionally, if you refuse to submit to evidentiary testing, your license will be revoked for 1 year in addition to the revocation for the actual DUI. So, for example, if this is your first offense and you refuse testing, then your license would be revoked for 1 year due to the refusal and 185 days for the first offense DUI.
  • Hearing deadline: You generally have 7 days from notice of revocation (often at arrest for breath cases) to request a DMV hearing to contest the revocation and obtain/keep a temporary license pending the decision. The notice of revocation in the event of a breath test will be a pink sheet that the DMV designates as a DP-45. It will set forth that your license was seized by the officer as a result of a breath test that was above the legal limit. The back will have instructions on requesting a hearing. If you elected to have blood drawn instead, then the notification of the suspension will be mailed to you by the DMV once the blood test comes back and it is above the legal limit of either alcohol or drugs. An important practice pointer here is that you can maintain your driving privileges if the drug found in your system is a prescription drug or medication and you can show proof that the prescription was valid at the time you were driving. However, prescription or not, you can still be criminally charged for being too impaired to drive if the medication in your system is beyond what is known as the therapeutic use value, i.e. you were taking too much of it.
  • Ignition Interlock (IID): Courts shall order an IID for many first/second DUI convictions (often ≥185 days), with longer ranges for felony outcomes upon release from prison.
  • Evidentiary Standard at a DMV hearing: Hearings are conducted under the Administrative Procedures Act codified at NRS 233B. This means that the evidentiary standard is much lower than the criminal trial and the judge only has to find some evidence that the elements of DUI were met. Hearsay evidence is permitted, you are not entitled to suppress unlawful evidence, and virtually all DMV hearings where the officer shows up will result in you losing your privileges to drive without a breath interlock device. However, these hearings can be a crucial tool to cross examine the arresting officer and look for flaws in the case that can be used to possibly prevail in the criminal case.

What To Do Next
Bring your citation, testing paperwork, and your account of the stop. We’ll pressure-test the State’s elements, timelines, and evidence handling—and map the fastest path to a dismissal, reduction, or suppression.

Disclaimer
This page is informational only. Nevada statutes change. Consult current NRS before relying on any summary.

  • Drove or was in actual physical control of a vehicle
  • on a highway or premises open to the public
  • While impaired by alcohol and/or a controlled substance to a degree that rendered the driver incapable of safely operating a vehicle OR with an unlawful alcohol concentration, above .08 or more but less for commercial drivers and those under 21, measured within 2 hours of driving (or with multiple blood draws and then using math to predict that the driver's BAC was above .08 or more while driving) OR an unlawful concentration of drugs above a per-se amount set forth in NRS 484C.110.
Situation / CountPenalty
First Offense (Misdemeanor within 7 years): Jail for at least 2 days but not more than 6 months, a statutory fine, a DUI school, a victim impact panel, a breath interlock device for 185 days, a mandatory chemical dependency assessment if the driver is under 21 or the BAC is above .16
Second Offense (Misdemeanor within 7 years)At least 20 days jail or house arrest but not more than 6 months, higher minimum fine, DUI school, a victim impact panel, a breath interlock device for 1 year, a mandatory chemical dependency assessment.
Third Offense (Category B within 7 years)Punishable by 1 to 6 years in state prison and not eligible for probation unless you're accepted into the Felony DUI Diversion program. If you successfully complete the program, then it is reduced to a second offense misdemeanor but it still counts as a felony for future enhancement purposes. This means that any future DUI will be a Category B felony punishable by 2 to 15 years in prison and you are not eligible for probation. Additionally, there is a mandatory fine between $2,000 and $5,000 on third offense DUIS.
  • Illegal Stop in Nevada DUI Cases (Motion to Suppress) — Overview A DUI case can collapse if the traffic stop was illegal. In Nevada, officers need at least reasonable suspicion of a traffic violation or criminal activity to stop a vehicle, and they can’t prolong a stop without fresh justification. If the initial stop or the duration/search was unlawful, evidence that follows (odor, field sobriety [...]
Most DUI Cases follow this timeline for purposes of resolving or trying the case: Arraignment → Discovery → Motions (suppress stop, breath/blood issues, chain of custody, DRE methodology) → Negotiations → Trial → Sentencing. Parallel DMV track: request hearing timely; consider ignition interlock options. Preserve calibration logs, observation period records, medical conditions, and video (dash/body cam).
Is .08% the only way to get a DUI?

No. Nevada allows conviction based on impairment below .08, and there are different per-se limits for commercial drivers. The Court focuses on whether the defendant is impaired to the point that they are unsafe to operate a motor vehicle. Pre-stop driving behaviors are usually the most indicative. Additionally, there are drug based DUIs as well for both street and prescription drugs.

How long is the revocation for a first offense?

185 days for a first offense but you can reinstate your driving privileges with a breath interlock device installed.

Is a third offense within 7 years a felony?

Yes, however, you can apply for the felony DUI court program and serve a probationary period of 3 to 5 years and have it reduced to a second offense misdemeanor at the end.

What happens if I have a felony DUI conviction from another state and I'm stopped for DUI in Nevada?

This is punishable as something called once a felon, always a felon. It's a category B felony punishable by 2 to 15 years in state prison. You are also not eligible for probation.

Quick Facts

Level: Felony, Misdemeanor
Court: District Court, Justice Court, Municipal Court
Mandatory Minimums: Mandatory Minimums: First offense: 2 days jail or community service; Second offense: Minimum 20 days or 20 days residential confinement (2025 update).
Max Term / Fine: For felony offenses involving death or substantial bodily harm 20 years or life if charged as vehicular homicide. The maximum fine for felony offenses is $5,000
Interlock / License: An interlock is required for 185 days for a first offense.