Based on Sentencing Council Guidelines

Drink Driving Penalty & Ban Calculator

Use this quick online calculator to get an estimate of the sentence you may expect for a drink driving offence. Enter your breath, blood or urine reading and the calculator below will give you the likely penalty, ban length, and custody risk based on the 4 court sentencing guidelines categories used in England and Wales.

If you are facing a drink driving charge, aggravating factors, mitigating circumstances, and the quality of your solicitor all influence the final sentence. Use our drink driving penalty calculator as a starting point, then speak to a specialist for tailored advice on what you could receive for your drink driving case.

12 monthsMinimum Driving BanMandatory minimum for first offence
6 monthsMaximum CustodyMagistrates' court limit
UnlimitedMaximum FineMeans-tested based on income

Drink Driving Ban Calculator

Based on Sentencing Council guidelines

Legal limits: Breath 35 µg | Blood 80 mg | Urine 107 mg

Facing a Drink Driving Charge?

Whether you are charged with driving or attempting to drive over the legal limit, our driving offence solicitors offer a free consultation to advise on your drink drive penalty and ban.

Call 0330 912 3442

How Does the Drink Driving Ban Calculator Work?

The drink driving calculator uses the same guideline that a magistrate follows to calculate your penalty and ban. Each drink drive offence is assessed through a structured 5-step process from the Sentencing Council.

01

Identify Category

The court determines your drink driving penalty category based on your breath, blood or urine specimen reading under the Road Traffic Act.

02

Consider Aggravation

Aggravating factors are assessed. Examples include previous convictions, a collision, or driving with passengers. The offender's record is reviewed.

03

Apply Mitigation

Mitigating factors reduce the drink driving ban. A solicitor presents good character evidence and personal circumstances to lower the sentence.

04

Guilty Plea Discount

An early guilty plea attracts up to 33% reduction in the drink driving penalty and ban length.

05

Final Sentence

The court sets the final disqualification period, fine or community order, and any drink drive course reduction.

What Are the 4 Drink Driving Penalty Categories?

The drink driving penalty calculator uses 4 categories based on your specimen reading. Each category defines the ban length, fine band, and custody threshold for the offence.

CategoryBreath (µg)Blood (mg)Urine (mg)Starting PointBan (1st)Ban (2nd)
1(highest)120 - 150+276 - 345+367 - 459+12 weeks custody29 - 36 months36 - 60 months
290 - 119207 - 275275 - 366Medium level community order23 - 28 months36 - 52 months
360 - 89138 - 206184 - 274Band C fine17 - 22 months36 - 46 months
4(lowest)36 - 5981 - 137108 - 183Band C fine12 - 16 months36 - 40 months

A first drink-driving conviction carries a minimum 12-month driving licence disqualification. A second offence within 10 years increases the minimum drink driving ban to 36 months. Penalties for drink and drug driving offences are assessed separately by the court.

Worried About Your Drink Driving Ban?

Geoffrey Miller Solicitors achieve shorter bans and reduced sentences for drink drive clients through expert mitigation.

Call 0330 912 3442

What Factors Affect a Drink Driving Sentence?

Whether you are facing a drink driving charge or a motoring offence such as failing to provide a specimen, understanding these factors helps you estimate what penalty and ban you may receive. A conviction can affect your licence, career, and livelihood.

Aggravating factors are circumstances that make the offence more serious and move the sentence upwards within the sentencing range. The Sentencing Council identifies specific aggravating factors for drink driving.

Previous convictions for drink driving or related offences represent the most significant aggravating factor. A second conviction within 10 years triggers the higher disqualification range shown in the calculator.

Being involved in a road traffic collision while drink driving substantially increases seriousness. Causing injury to others escalates the charge to a more serious offence carrying significantly higher penalties.

Other aggravating factors include carrying passengers (particularly children), poor road conditions or high traffic areas, evidence of an unacceptable standard of driving, driving for hire or reward, and being on bail at the time of the offence.

Mitigating factors are circumstances that reduce the severity of the sentence. Courts consider these when determining where within the sentencing range to place the final penalty.

No previous convictions and good character demonstrate that the offence was an isolated incident. A clean driving record spanning many years provides strong mitigation.

Personal circumstances affecting dependants carry significant weight. Being the sole provider for a family, providing essential care for elderly or disabled relatives, or the impact on children's welfare all constitute mitigation.

A genuine emergency that led to the decision to drive, although not a complete defence, reduces culpability. Remorse and steps taken to address the underlying issue also demonstrate willingness to change.

Under the Sentencing Act 2020, courts must reduce sentences for defendants who plead guilty. The reduction depends on when you enter the plea.

A guilty plea at the first reasonable opportunity attracts the maximum one-third (33%) reduction. After trial dates are set, the reduction drops to a maximum of 25%. On the first day of trial, only a 10% reduction applies.

The guilty plea reduction applies to fines, community order requirements, and custodial sentences. For example, a Category 1 offence with a starting point of 12 weeks custody could be reduced to approximately 8 weeks with a full guilty plea discount.

The Drink Drive Rehabilitation Scheme (DDRS) is a course that, if offered by the court and completed successfully, reduces your disqualification period by up to 25%. The court decides whether to offer the course at sentencing.

The course typically costs between £150 and £250 and must be completed before the end of your disqualification period. It involves attending educational sessions about the effects of alcohol on driving ability and decision-making.

For example, if you receive an 18-month disqualification and the court offers the DDRS, completing the course could reduce your ban to approximately 13.5 months. The minimum disqualification after DDRS reduction cannot fall below 12 months.

You are classified as a High Risk Offender (HRO) by the DVLA if your breath reading was 87.5 µg or above, your blood reading was 200 mg or above, or your urine reading was 267.5 mg or above.

You are also classified as an HRO if you have been disqualified for failing to provide a specimen, or if you have been disqualified on two or more occasions within 10 years for drink driving related offences.

Being classified as a High Risk Offender means you must pass a DVLA medical examination before your driving licence is returned. The medical involves blood tests to check liver function and confirm you do not have an ongoing alcohol dependency.

The medical examination typically costs between £150 and £250 and must be arranged through a DVLA-approved doctor. Failing the medical means your licence will not be returned until you can demonstrate satisfactory results.

Drink driving carries a mandatory minimum 12-month disqualification upon conviction. Unlike speeding offences, there is no exceptional hardship argument to avoid the ban. If convicted, you will be disqualified.

However, the length of the ban varies significantly within the sentencing ranges. Effective mitigation can result in a ban at the lower end of the range rather than the upper end.

The only way to avoid a ban entirely is to successfully defend the charge. Defences include challenging the breath test procedure, questioning the reliability of the evidence, raising issues with police procedure, or establishing that you were not driving or attempting to drive.

Several defences to drink driving charges exist, including procedural failures, evidential challenges, and statutory defences.

Breathalyser and blood test procedures must follow strict protocols. Errors in calibration, incorrect operation of the device, failure to offer a blood test alternative, or breaks in the chain of custody for blood samples can all undermine the prosecution evidence.

The hip flask defence applies where alcohol was consumed after driving but before providing a sample. If you can prove that your alcohol level was below the limit at the time of driving, this provides a complete defence.

Laced drinks may form the basis of a special reasons argument. If someone added alcohol to your drink without your knowledge, and you would not have been over the limit based on what you knowingly consumed, the court may choose not to disqualify.

Once your disqualification period ends, you can apply to get your driving licence back. Standard offenders can apply to the DVLA for their licence to be returned from the date their disqualification ends.

High Risk Offenders must pass the DVLA medical before their licence is returned. This process should be initiated at least 90 days before the end of your ban.

Car insurance premiums increase significantly after a drink driving conviction. A DR10 conviction remains on your licence for 11 years and must be declared to insurers. Premiums typically increase by 50-100% or more.

The conviction also appears on your criminal record. For standard offences, it becomes spent after 5 years (or 12 months if only a fine was imposed without disqualification).

Charged With Drug Driving, Totting Up, or Failing to Provide a Specimen?

Our solicitors also handle drug driving charges, totting up ban cases, and specimen offences. Contact us for a free consultation about any road traffic matter.

Call 0330 912 3442

How Do Solicitors Reduce a Drink Driving Ban?

If you have been convicted of drink driving, specialist offence solicitors achieve shorter bans and lower penalties than unrepresented defendants. Expertise in motoring law and the sentencing guidelines ensures the most lenient sentence available for your circumstances.

Every aspect of prosecution evidence is analysed for weaknesses. Breathalyser calibration records, blood test procedures, custody records, and officer training documentation must comply with strict road traffic requirements. A drink driving offence conviction can be challenged where procedure has not been followed.

Fixed-fee representation starts from £300 plus VAT for guilty plea cases at magistrates' court, with national coverage across England and Wales. Our drink driving ban calculator gives you an estimate of the sentence before you instruct a solicitor.

Evidence Analysis

Prosecution documents are scrutinised for procedural errors that could reduce your drink drive penalty or lead to acquittal.

Expert Mitigation

Character references, employment evidence, and financial information presented to reduce the drink driving penalty and ban.

Fixed-Fee Pricing

From £300 + VAT for drink drive offence representation. No hidden costs or hourly billing.

National Coverage

Representation at magistrates' courts across England and Wales for all drink drive and motoring offence cases.

SRA RegulatedSolicitors Regulation Authority
Specialist FirmMotoring Law Experts
10,000+Motorists Represented
Free AdviceInitial Consultation

Calculate Your Drink Driving Penalty and Speak to a Solicitor

Use the penalty calculator above to get an estimate, then call for a free consultation. Over 10,000 motorists represented. We advise on course reduction, driving licence disqualification, and how to minimise the sentence you could receive for your drink driving conviction.

Call 0330 912 3442