Motoring Calculator

Drink Driving Penalty Calculator 2025 — BAC, Fines & Disqualification

Drink driving carries serious penalties in England and Wales — mandatory disqualification, unlimited fines, and up to 14 years imprisonment in fatal cases. This tool estimates penalties based on your alcohol reading and circumstances.

Your Reading & Circumstances

Likely Penalty

Disqualification period
Times over the limit
Estimated fine range
Minimum disqualification
Rehabilitation course?
Course reduction in ban
Maximum sentence

Drink Driving Penalties UK 2025 — Fines, Bans, and Criminal Record

Drink driving is a serious criminal offence carrying mandatory driving disqualification, an unlimited fine, and potentially a custodial sentence. Even a first offence results in a minimum 12-month driving ban and a criminal record that remains for 11 years. Understanding the sentencing guidelines, the legal limits, and the long-term consequences is essential for anyone facing or wanting to avoid a drink driving charge.

Legal Alcohol Limits in England and Wales

  • Breath test: 35 micrograms of alcohol per 100ml (legal limit); 80 micrograms = two and a half times the limit
  • Blood test: 80mg per 100ml
  • Urine test: 107mg per 100ml

Scotland has a lower limit: 22mcg/100ml breath and 50mg/100ml blood. These lower limits mean a driver legal in England could be over the limit in Scotland. The safest approach in all jurisdictions is not to drink at all before driving — individual variation in alcohol metabolism makes "safe drinking limits" unreliable.

Sentencing Guidelines — By Reading Level

  • 35–59mcg breath (in breath): 12–16 months ban; fine; community order possible
  • 60–89mcg: 17–22 months ban; higher fine; community order likely
  • 90–119mcg: 23–28 months ban; fine or community order; possible custody
  • 120–150mcg: 29–36 months ban; custody possible to likely
  • Over 150mcg: 36+ months ban; custody expected

These are Magistrates' Court guidelines. Aggravating factors (accident, passengers, previous offences) increase sentences. Mitigating factors (genuine emergency, minor reading above limit) reduce them.

Drink Drive Rehabilitation Scheme (DDRS)

For most first-time offenders, the court will offer a DDRS course. Completing an approved course can reduce your disqualification period by up to 25% — a 12-month ban becomes 9 months. The course typically costs £150–£250 over two days and must be accepted at sentencing. It is widely considered worthwhile not only for the licence reduction but for the practical insight into risk reduction.

High Risk Offender Scheme

Drivers convicted with a reading of 87.5mcg/100ml breath (or blood equivalent), who refused to provide a specimen, or who have two drink driving convictions within 10 years, are designated High Risk Offenders. They cannot simply apply to DVLA for their licence back when the ban ends — they must first pass a DVLA medical examination assessing alcohol dependency. This process can add weeks to the effective ban period while the medical is arranged and assessed.

Insurance Consequences — 11 Years of Higher Premiums

A drink driving conviction (DR10 endorsement) stays on your licence for 11 years. During this period, you must disclose it to motor insurers at renewal. Most mainstream insurers significantly increase premiums or decline cover. Specialist convicted driver brokers can find cover but premiums can be three to five times pre-conviction levels. The cumulative insurance cost over 11 years can significantly exceed the court fine and legal fees combined.

Morning After Risk

A significant and growing number of drink driving convictions occur the morning after heavy drinking. The body processes approximately one unit per hour, but this varies enormously between individuals. A pint of 4.5% beer contains approximately 2.25 units; a 750ml bottle of 12.5% wine contains approximately 9.4 units. Consuming more than a few drinks before midnight does not guarantee you will be legal to drive at 7am the following morning.

Refusing a Breath Test — A Separate Offence

Refusing to provide a specimen of breath, blood, or urine when lawfully required by a police officer is itself a criminal offence under the Road Traffic Act 1988. The offence of refusing to provide a specimen carries the same sentencing range as drink driving — including mandatory disqualification of at least 12 months and an unlimited fine. Courts tend to treat refusal unsympathetically as it is seen as obstructing the proper operation of drink driving enforcement.

Refusing also triggers High Risk Offender status automatically (alongside conviction with a reading of 87.5mcg+ or two convictions within 10 years), meaning you must pass a DVLA medical examination before your licence can be returned after the ban.

The social and personal consequences of a drink driving conviction extend beyond the immediate legal penalties. Professional drivers, HGV licence holders, and those working in regulated industries face career-ending consequences from any driving disqualification. For private individuals, the loss of a licence for 12 months or more can affect employment, family logistics, and mental health significantly. The best outcome is never to be in the position of facing a charge — but if you are, instructing a specialist road traffic solicitor immediately gives you the best prospects for the least severe sentence within the guidelines range.

The financial consequences of drink driving extend well beyond the court fine. A 12-month ban, higher insurance premiums for 11 years, the cost of legal representation, and potential loss of employment combine to make drink driving one of the most financially damaging offences available to commit in a moment of poor judgment. The total cost over 11 years for a first offence, including insurance premium increases, can easily exceed £30,000–£50,000 for a driver in full-time employment who retains their licence. That cost does not include the human cost to any victims, nor the psychological toll of a conviction that remains disclosed for over a decade. The only reliable strategy is not to drive after drinking any alcohol at all.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will a drink driving conviction affect my employment?+
Potentially yes. A drink driving conviction is a criminal record that must be disclosed to many employers — always for driving roles, for regulated professions (doctors, nurses, solicitors, financial services), and for roles asking about unspent convictions. A disqualification period over 12 months results in a conviction that is never "spent" under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act for certain purposes. Check your employment contract and professional body obligations carefully.
What is exceptional hardship and does it apply to drink driving bans?+
Exceptional hardship arguments (demonstrating that loss of licence causes exceptional, not merely significant, hardship to third parties) apply to totting-up disqualifications — reaching 12 penalty points. They do not apply to the mandatory disqualification arising from a drink driving conviction. For drink driving, the focus should be on mitigation that reduces the ban length within the sentencing guidelines range.
Can I drive to an MOT test while on a drink driving ban?+
Absolutely not. While you can drive an untaxed car directly to a pre-booked MOT test, this exception does not apply if you are disqualified from driving. Driving while disqualified is a separate serious criminal offence carrying its own penalties including imprisonment, further disqualification, and penalty points. Arrange for a family member, friend, or professional transport service to move the vehicle.
What is drug driving and how is it different from drink driving?+
Drug driving is a separate offence from drink driving. The drug driving limit was set in 2015 with specified limits for 17 controlled drugs (both illegal drugs and some prescription medications). Police use roadside "drugalyser" saliva tests to screen for cannabis, cocaine, benzodiazepines, and other drugs. The penalties for drug driving mirror those for drink driving — mandatory 12-month minimum disqualification, unlimited fine, and up to 6 months imprisonment. Prescription medications above the legal threshold also constitute drug driving, so always check medication leaflets and consult your GP if concerned about driving.