Out-of-State DUI: What California Drivers and Visitors Must Know
The Stakes Are Too High to Ignore — Call Attorney David Chesley at (800) 755-5174
An out-of-state DUI is not a problem that disappears when you cross a state line. Whether you are a California resident who was arrested while traveling, or you were visiting California when law enforcement stopped you, the consequences follow you home — affecting your driver's license, your criminal record, and your future. Attorney David Chesley has spent decades helping clients navigate exactly these situations, and the single most important thing you can do right now is understand what you are facing.
California Residents Arrested for a DUI in Another State
Many California drivers assume that a DUI arrest in Nevada, Arizona, Texas, or any other state is somehow insulated from their California driving privileges. It is not. When a California resident is convicted of a DUI in another state, the California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) will almost certainly learn about it — and act on it.
The out-of-state court handles the criminal case under its own laws, which means sentencing guidelines, fines, license suspension periods, and mandatory programs vary dramatically from California's framework. You may be ordered to complete an alcohol education program that does not exist in California, or face an ignition interlock requirement that must somehow be reconciled with your home state's rules. Navigating compliance across two jurisdictions simultaneously is genuinely complex, and the consequences of getting it wrong compound quickly.
There is also the question of whether you must appear in person in the state where you were arrested. In many jurisdictions, an attorney licensed in that state — or one working in coordination with local counsel — can appear on your behalf, saving you the cost and logistical burden of multiple out-of-state trips. The earlier you engage experienced counsel, the more options you have.
If you are a California resident facing a DUI charge in another state, contact Attorney David Chesley at (800) 755-5174 or email calllog@chesleylawyers.speedvitals.org. The clock on your DMV hearing rights and criminal defense deadlines may already be running.
Out-of-State Residents Arrested for a DUI in California
If you do not live in California but were arrested for DUI here, you are subject to California's DUI laws in full — no exceptions, no reduced treatment for visitors. California's DUI statutes are among the most rigorously enforced in the country. A first-offense DUI in California can result in jail time, fines exceeding $10,000 when assessments are factored in, mandatory DUI school, probation, and a six-month license suspension from the California DMV.
What makes an out-of-state resident's situation uniquely complicated is the dual-track proceeding California requires. Within ten calendar days of your arrest, a hearing must be requested with the California DMV or your driving privilege in California is automatically suspended. This administrative hearing is entirely separate from your criminal court case. Many out-of-state defendants, unfamiliar with California procedure, miss this deadline entirely — and lose their right to contest the suspension before a single argument is made.
Your home state will also receive notification of the California conviction. Depending on your state's laws and its agreements with California, your home state may impose its own separate suspension, require you to complete its own DUI programs, and count the California conviction as a prior offense if you are ever charged again.
Attorney David Chesley represents out-of-state clients charged with DUI in California courts and before the California DMV. In many cases, he can appear on your behalf so that you do not need to make repeated trips to California. Call (800) 755-5174 today.
The Interstate Driver's License Compact: Why There Is No Such Thing as a Clean Slate in Another State
The Interstate Driver's License Compact (DLC) is a formal agreement among the vast majority of U.S. states — including California — designed to ensure that drivers cannot escape the consequences of traffic offenses simply by crossing a state border. Under the Compact, member states agree to share information about license suspensions, DUI convictions, and serious traffic violations, and to treat out-of-state offenses as though they occurred in the driver's home state.
California is a DLC member. When you are convicted of a DUI in any other member state, that state reports the conviction to California. California then reviews whether the conduct would have been a violation under California law, and if so, imposes the corresponding penalty on your California driving record and privilege — just as if you had been convicted here.
The practical result is straightforward: a DUI conviction in Colorado, Florida, Georgia, or nearly any other state will appear on your California DMV record and will be treated as a California DUI for purposes of suspension, points, and insurance. Conversely, your California conviction is reported to your home state if you live elsewhere.
There are narrow exceptions and procedural nuances — a handful of states are not DLC members, and the reporting mechanisms are not always instantaneous. But relying on gaps in the system is not a legal strategy. It is a gamble with your driving privileges and your record.
How an Out-of-State DUI Conviction Affects Your California Driver's License
The California DMV does not simply note an out-of-state DUI and move on. Under Vehicle Code Section 13352 and related provisions, California will impose the same license consequences it would impose for an equivalent California conviction. That means:
A first-offense DUI in another state will typically result in a six-month California license suspension, assuming no aggravating factors. You may be eligible for a restricted license allowing travel to work and DUI school, or — if you install an ignition interlock device — broader driving privileges under recent California IID expansion laws.
A second DUI within ten years triggers a two-year suspension, with the out-of-state conviction potentially counting as the first offense for purposes of California's "within ten years" look-back period.
A third offense within ten years carries a three-year revocation. California's DMV treats a pattern of out-of-state and in-state offenses cumulatively. The timeline and the history matter enormously.
Refusal to submit to chemical testing in another state can also trigger a one-year California suspension independent of any conviction, because California treats refusal as a separate administrative violation.
Beyond the DMV consequences, an out-of-state DUI on your record elevates your insurance premiums — often dramatically — and can affect professional licenses, security clearances, and employment opportunities that require background checks.
Challenging Out-of-State DUI Priors: Prior Convictions Are Not Always Final
One of the most strategically important — and frequently overlooked — aspects of out-of-state DUI cases is that prior convictions used to enhance a current charge may be challengeable. Under California law and established constitutional principles, a prior DUI conviction, whether from California or another state, can sometimes be attacked and excluded from consideration in a current case.
The grounds for challenging an out-of-state prior include:
Constitutional defects in the prior proceeding. If you were not properly advised of your right to counsel, your right to trial, or your right against self-incrimination before pleading guilty in the prior case, that prior conviction may be constitutionally infirm and inadmissible to enhance a new charge.
Factual and legal non-equivalence. California courts must determine whether the out-of-state offense is "substantially similar" to a California DUI offense before using it as a prior. Some states define DUI differently — different blood alcohol thresholds, different prohibited substances, different elements. If the out-of-state offense does not closely mirror California's statute, it may not legally qualify as a prior.
Procedural defects in the prior case. Missing or defective plea colloquies, improperly administered waivers, and failures of out-of-state courts to follow their own procedures can all provide grounds to challenge the prior's validity.
Successfully challenging a prior DUI can reduce a felony charge to a misdemeanor, eliminate mandatory minimums, restore eligibility for diversion or probation, and dramatically change the sentencing landscape. This is not a minor procedural footnote — it can be the difference between a prison sentence and a path back to normal life.
Attorney David Chesley has extensive experience identifying and litigating challenges to out-of-state priors. If you are facing a DUI case in California and there is a prior conviction from another state in your history, it deserves careful scrutiny before you accept any outcome. Call (800) 755-5174 to discuss whether your prior can be challenged.
Why You Cannot Ignore an Out-of-State DUI
The temptation to ignore an out-of-state DUI — particularly for California residents who believe the other state cannot reach them — is understandable and almost always catastrophic in practice. Here is why:
Bench warrants follow you. If you fail to appear in a court where you are required, the judge issues a bench warrant. That warrant exists in a national database. A routine traffic stop in California or anywhere else can result in your arrest on the out-of-state warrant, often at the worst possible moment.
Failure to appear can convert a misdemeanor into a felony. In many states, willful failure to appear on a criminal charge is itself a separate criminal offense. What began as a standard DUI can become an obstruction or failure-to-appear charge compounding your legal exposure.
License suspension without notice. Under the Interstate Driver's License Compact, California can and does suspend your driving privilege based on out-of-state convictions and administrative actions — sometimes without sending the notification to your correct address. You may be driving on a suspended license without knowing it, which creates criminal liability every time you get behind the wheel.
Insurance consequences accelerate. Insurers run periodic driving record checks. An unresolved out-of-state matter that ripens into a conviction mid-policy can trigger cancellation or premium increases retroactively.
Future criminal cases become far more serious. The most consequential reason not to ignore an out-of-state DUI is what it does to any future case. A DUI that might otherwise be your first offense becomes a second or third — with all the mandatory sentences, longer license revocations, and reduced plea options that come with it.
The time to address an out-of-state DUI is before it becomes a compounding legal crisis. Early intervention by an experienced DUI attorney can mean the difference between resolving a case quietly and efficiently versus managing years of cascading consequences.
Why Attorney David Chesley
David Chesley is a California DUI defense attorney with decades of experience handling complex DUI cases, including those involving out-of-state charges, multi-jurisdictional proceedings, and challenges to prior convictions. He understands how California's DMV operates, how out-of-state cases interact with California law, and how to build the most aggressive defense possible on your behalf.
Whether you are a California driver who received a DUI citation in another state, a visitor who was arrested here, or someone now facing an enhanced charge because of a prior conviction from years ago, the right time to act is today.
Call Attorney David Chesley at (800) 755-5174. Email: calllog@chesleylawyers.speedvitals.org
Consultations are confidential. Do not wait for the problem to come to you — it already has.
This page provides general information about out-of-state DUI consequences in California and is not legal advice. Laws, Compact participation, and outcomes vary by case/jurisdiction and may change. No result guaranteed. Consult a licensed California attorney about your situation. © Law Office of David Chesley, Inc.
















































