Free Guide to License Suspension and Legal Process
Understanding License Suspension: What It Means and How It Happens A driver's license suspension is a temporary removal of your driving privileges. When your...
Understanding License Suspension: What It Means and How It Happens
A driver's license suspension is a temporary removal of your driving privileges. When your license is suspended, you are not permitted to legally operate a motor vehicle on public roads. This differs from a license revocation, which is a permanent cancellation of your driving privileges that typically requires you to reapply for a license after a waiting period.
License suspensions occur through several pathways. The most common reason is accumulating too many traffic violations within a specific time period. Most states use a points system where different violations carry different point values. For example, a speeding ticket might be worth 3 points, while a reckless driving citation could be 6 points or more. When you reach a threshold—often between 12 and 18 points depending on your state and age—your license may be suspended automatically.
Another major cause of suspension is failing to pay traffic fines or court costs. When you receive a ticket and don't pay it by the due date, the court may report this to the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), which then suspends your license. Some states also suspend licenses for failure to appear in court or failure to complete required traffic school courses.
Medical suspensions occur when your state's DMV determines that a health condition may impair your driving ability. This could result from vision problems, seizure disorders, or other documented medical issues. DUI (driving under the influence) convictions result in automatic suspension, with the length depending on whether it's a first, second, or subsequent offense. Administrative suspensions can happen immediately after a DUI arrest, even before a conviction.
Child support enforcement also leads to suspensions in all 50 states. If you fall behind on child support payments, the state can suspend your license as a collection tool. Similarly, non-payment of certain taxes or student loans can trigger suspension in some jurisdictions.
Practical takeaway: Understand which specific actions or circumstances in your state lead to suspension. Check your state's DMV website for the point threshold, violation point values, and other suspension triggers relevant to your situation.
The Administrative Process: Notice, Suspension, and Administrative Hearings
When a suspension is about to occur, you should receive written notice from your state's DMV or Department of Driver Services. This notice typically includes the reason for the suspension, the effective date, and information about how to request an administrative hearing. The timeline between notice and suspension varies by state and reason, but you generally have 10 to 30 days to request a hearing.
An administrative hearing is your opportunity to challenge the suspension before it takes effect or to present circumstances that may affect the outcome. This hearing is separate from any criminal or traffic court proceedings. You appear before a hearing officer or administrative judge employed by the DMV, not a criminal court judge. The hearing officer reviews evidence and testimony to determine whether the suspension should proceed, be modified, or be cancelled.
What you can present at an administrative hearing depends on the suspension reason. For points-based suspensions, you might argue that some points were incorrectly assigned or that violations were dismissed. For failure-to-pay suspensions, you can explain financial hardship and request a payment plan. For medical suspensions, you can provide updated medical documentation showing your condition has improved or is being managed. For DUI suspensions, the hearing typically focuses on whether the arrest and testing procedures were conducted properly.
If you don't request a hearing or if you request one but lose, the suspension becomes effective on the stated date. Some states allow you to request a second hearing or appeal to a civil court, but this varies significantly by jurisdiction. The cost of requesting a hearing ranges from zero to several hundred dollars depending on your state.
During a suspension, you cannot legally drive except in very limited circumstances. Some states offer a "hardship license" or "work permit" that allows you to drive only to and from work, school, medical appointments, or court-required programs like DUI classes. To obtain a hardship license, you typically must show that the suspension creates significant financial or medical hardship and that no reasonable alternative transportation exists.
Practical takeaway: If you receive a suspension notice, request an administrative hearing within the timeframe specified. Gather documentation supporting your position before the hearing date, and show up prepared to present your case clearly and professionally.
Points Systems and Traffic Violations: How Driving Record Accumulation Works
Most states use a points-based system to track unsafe driving behavior. Each traffic violation carries a specific point value based on the seriousness of the offense. Understanding how points accumulate and how long they remain on your record is essential to avoiding suspension.
Minor violations typically carry 1 to 3 points. These include speeding 1 to 10 miles per hour over the limit, improper lane change, failing to signal, or equipment violations like a broken taillight. Moderate violations carry 3 to 6 points and include speeding 11 to 20 miles per hour over the limit, tailgating, running a stop sign, or reckless driving. Major violations carry 6 to 12 or more points and include speeding more than 20 miles per hour over the limit, hit and run, DUI, or driving with a suspended license.
Different states use different thresholds for suspension. In many states, accumulating 12 points within 12 months triggers a 30-day suspension. Accumulating 18 points within 18 months triggers a longer suspension, often 60 to 90 days. Some states have tiered systems where the suspension length increases with each suspension within a set period. For example, a first suspension might be 30 days, a second within three years might be 60 days, and a third might be 90 days or result in revocation.
Points remain on your driving record for a set period, typically 3 to 5 years from the conviction date, though this varies by state and violation type. After the points fall off your record, they no longer count toward suspension thresholds. Some states allow you to reduce points by completing defensive driving courses. Taking an approved course might remove 3 to 5 points from your record or prevent points from being added in the first place.
Your driving record is public information that you can obtain from your state's DMV for a small fee, usually $5 to $25. You can order it online, by mail, or in person. Reviewing your record lets you verify its accuracy and see exactly which violations are reported and how many points each carries.
Practical takeaway: Order a copy of your driving record to see your current point total and the effective dates for each violation. Calculate how many points you can accumulate before suspension becomes likely, and prioritize taking a defensive driving course if your state allows point reduction through this method.
DUI Suspensions: Administrative and Criminal Consequences
A DUI (driving under the influence) or DWI (driving while intoxicated) arrest triggers two separate suspension processes: an administrative suspension and a potential criminal suspension. Understanding the difference is crucial because they proceed on different timelines and in different systems.
The administrative suspension happens almost immediately after arrest. In most states, if you fail or refuse a breathalyzer or blood test, your license is suspended on the spot or within a few days. This is called an administrative license suspension (ALS). The suspension typically lasts 6 months for a first offense, though refusal to test often results in a longer suspension—sometimes 12 months. This suspension happens regardless of whether you are later convicted of the DUI in criminal court.
You have a limited window, usually 10 to 30 days, to request an administrative hearing to challenge the suspension. At this hearing, you can contest the legality of the traffic stop, the administration of the breath or blood test, whether you were actually impaired, or whether the officer had probable cause to arrest you. If you win the hearing, the administrative suspension may be cancelled even before any criminal case is resolved.
If you are convicted of DUI in criminal court, the judge imposes an additional criminal license suspension. This suspension is separate from the administrative suspension and typically lasts longer—often 12 months for a first offense, with mandatory minimum periods. For a second DUI within 10 years, suspensions often extend to 2 to 3 years. A third or subsequent DUI may result in revocation rather than suspension.
Some states have mandatory minimum ignition interlock requirements as part of the suspension. An ignition interlock device is a breathalyzer built into your vehicle that tests your breath alcohol level before the engine
Related Guides
More guides on the way
Browse our full collection of free guides on topics that matter.
Browse All Guides →