Texas · DUI Laws

Texas DUI Laws

A complete guide to dui laws in Texas, based on the official TX DPS driver handbook.

Capital: Austin Min permit age: 15 Permit fee: $16 Hold period: 6 months

BAC limits in Texas

The legal blood-alcohol limit in Texas is 0.08% for drivers age 21 and older, 0.02% for drivers under 21, and 0.04% for anyone operating a commercial vehicle, regardless of age. A driver can be convicted of DUI in Texas below those numbers if a test or officer observation shows actual impairment — the BAC threshold is a per-se floor, not a safe harbor.

Implied consent

By accepting a Texas driver license or learner's permit you give implied consent to a breath, blood, or urine test if you are lawfully arrested for DUI. Refusing the chemical test triggers an automatic license suspension separate from — and in addition to — any criminal DUI penalty. The arresting officer is required to inform you of the consequences before you decide.

For a deeper read on this topic across all 50 states, see our right-of-way, speed limits, and alcohol and drugs articles.

Penalties for a first offense

A first DUI in Texas typically brings license suspension, fines that can exceed $1,000 with court costs, mandatory alcohol education, possible jail time, and an ignition interlock device requirement on any vehicle you drive after reinstatement. To get the license back you usually need to pay the $100 reinstatement fee and file an SR-22 certificate of insurance for several years.

Zero tolerance for under-21 drivers

If you are under 21 in Texas, the BAC threshold drops to 0.02%. That number is low enough that even a single drink can trigger it. A zero-tolerance suspension does not require a DUI arrest — a roadside breath test alone can produce an immediate administrative suspension that runs concurrently with any criminal case.

Open containers, marijuana, and prescription drugs

Open containers of alcohol in the passenger area of a vehicle are illegal anywhere accessible in passenger area in Texas. Marijuana DUI in Texas is enforced under the same impaired-driving statute as alcohol, and there is no per-se THC limit you can rely on — any amount that impairs is illegal. Prescription drugs are not a defense; if a medication impairs your driving, you can be charged exactly as you would for alcohol.

Quick facts about Texas

  • Capital: Austin
  • Minimum permit age: 15
  • Current permit fee: $16
  • Supervised hold period: 6 months
  • Adult BAC limit: 0.08% · Under-21 BAC: 0.02%
  • Default speed limits: 75 mph rural Interstate, 70 mph urban Interstate, 25 mph residential, 20 mph school zone
  • Handheld phone use: permitted but texting still illegal
  • Vision standard: 20/40 acuity in at least one eye, corrected or uncorrected
  • Reinstatement fee after suspension: $100
  • Official source: TX DPS

Other Texas guides on PermitPrep

Each link below opens a dedicated Texas page. Every guide is built from the same official TX DPS handbook so the rules stay consistent across topics.

Ready to test what you have learned? Take the free Texas permit practice test — 20 randomized questions, instant grading, full explanations.