By Deandra Grant, J.D., M.S. (Pharmaceutical Science), ACS-CHAL Forensic Lawyer-Scientist

The question: What are the penalties for a first DWI in Texas?

The short answer: A first-offense DWI in Texas is typically a Class B misdemeanor carrying up to 180 days in jail, a fine of up to $2,000, and a driver’s license suspension between 90 days and one year. If the driver’s blood alcohol concentration is 0.15 or higher, the offense is enhanced to a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in jail and a fine of up to $4,000. Additional penalties include mandatory ignition interlock in many cases and collateral consequences that last long after the criminal sentence ends. A first DWI in Texas is not a traffic ticket. It is a serious criminal conviction.

Here is the longer answer: the statutory penalties, the enhancements, the hidden costs, and why the technical maximum rarely tells the whole story.

The Statutory Framework: Texas Penal Code §49.04

Driving while intoxicated in Texas is defined by Penal Code §49.04. A person commits the offense if they operate a motor vehicle in a public place while intoxicated. “Intoxicated” under §49.01 means either not having the normal use of mental or physical faculties because of the introduction of alcohol, drugs, or a combination, or having a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more.

Under §49.04, a first-offense DWI is typically classified and punished as follows:

  • Class B misdemeanor (standard first offense). Punishable by a minimum of 72 hours in jail and a maximum of 180 days, a fine of up to $2,000, and a driver’s license suspension.
  • Class A misdemeanor (BAC 0.15 or higher). Under §49.04(d), if an analysis of a specimen of the person’s blood, breath, or urine shows an alcohol concentration of 0.15 or more at the time the analysis was performed, the offense is enhanced to a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in county jail and a fine of up to $4,000.

These are maximum punishments, not typical sentences. Many first-offense DWI cases resolve with probation, community service, and no additional jail time beyond the initial arrest. But the statutory ceiling matters. It is the backdrop for every plea negotiation, and it is the starting point for sentencing if a case goes to trial.

What Jail Time Actually Looks Like

The statute authorizes jail, but whether a first-offense DWI defendant actually serves jail time depends on the plea agreement or sentence entered:

  • Minimum 72-hour confinement. Even on a Class B first offense, the statute requires a minimum term of 72 hours of confinement if not placed on probation.
  • Probation in lieu of jail. Most first-offense DWI cases that result in conviction resolve with community supervision (probation) rather than straight jail time. Probation length is commonly one to two years.
  • Jail as a condition of probation. Judges sometimes order a short jail term (three to ten days is common) as a condition of probation.
  • Class A cases. A first-offense DWI enhanced to Class A because of a 0.15 or higher BAC carries heightened jail exposure and additional consequences, including the ignition interlock requirement discussed below.

Fines, Court Costs, and State Fines

The fine authorized by statute is only part of the financial picture. A first-offense DWI conviction typically generates the following categories of financial obligation:

  • Criminal fine. Up to $2,000 on a Class B, up to $4,000 on a Class A
  • Court costs. Several hundred dollars, added automatically to the judgment.
  • Probation fees. Monthly supervision fees, typically in the range of $60 to $75 per month, for the length of any probation term.
  • Program fees. Court-ordered programs (DWI education class, victim impact panel, substance abuse evaluation, repeat offender program in some cases) each carry their own costs.
  • State traffic fine under Texas Transportation Code §709.001. A separate fee imposed on conviction of an alcohol-related offense.
  • Ignition interlock costs. Installation, monthly monitoring fees, removal, and any violation or service charges. Costs vary by provider and by the length of the interlock period.
  • SR-22 filing and insurance premium increases. Discussed below — not a court cost, but a practical cost tied directly to the conviction.

Driver’s License Consequences

A first offense DWI conviction does not trigger a driver’s license suspension if probation is granted and the DWI education course is completed within 180 days of the date of conviction.

Ignition Interlock Requirements

Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 17.441 and Chapter 49 of the Penal Code together create a layered set of ignition interlock requirements that reach well beyond repeat offenders. For a first-offense DWI, an interlock device is typically required in the following circumstances:

  • Class A first offense (BAC 0.15 or higher). The statutory enhancement under §49.04(d) brings with it an interlock requirement both as a bond condition and a probation condition.
  • As a condition of bond in Article 17.441 cases. In the statutorily specified categories of DWI, the court is directed to require an ignition interlock as a condition of bond.
  • As a condition of probation. A judge placing a first-offense DWI defendant on community supervision may require an interlock as a condition of probation for part or all of the probation term.

Interlock requirements look narrower than they actually are. Between bond conditions, probation conditions, and licensing requirements, many first-offense DWI defendants interact with an interlock device at some point during the case.

Probation Conditions

Probation (known in Texas as community supervision) is the typical disposition for a first-offense DWI that results in conviction. Conditions commonly include:

  • DWI education class. A court-approved DWI education program, typically 12 hours, required within a defined period after placement on probation.
  • Victim impact panel. Attendance at a panel presentation by victims of impaired driving.
  • Substance abuse evaluation and any recommended counseling. A licensed chemical dependency counselor evaluates the defendant and recommends treatment, which the court typically orders.
  • Community service. A set number of community service hours, typically 24 to 100 hours on a first offense.
  • Alcohol and drug abstention. Probation conditions typically prohibit the use of alcohol and the non-prescription use of drugs during the probation period.
  • Travel and residence restrictions. Defendants on probation are generally required to remain in the county or a defined area absent court permission to travel and to report residence changes.
  • No further offenses. Any new arrest during the probation period can result in a motion to revoke probation.

Probation can be successfully completed by most first-offense DWI defendants. But a revocation (whether for a new offense or for technical violations of the conditions) reopens the full range of statutory punishment and can result in jail time the defendant thought was behind them.

The Class A Enhancement: BAC 0.15 or Higher

The single most common statutory enhancement on a first-offense DWI is the 0.15 BAC threshold under §49.04(d). Understanding what it is and is not matters:

  • What it enhances. It changes the offense from a Class B to a Class A misdemeanor, raising the maximum jail exposure to one year and the maximum fine to $4,000.
  • What it triggers. Interlock requirements, additional probation conditions, and closure of certain favorable dispositions including HB 3582 deferred adjudication, which is only available for first offenses with a BAC below 0.15.
  • What counts as the BAC. The statute looks at the analysis of a specimen of breath or blood showing an alcohol concentration of 0.15 or more “at the time the analysis was performed.” That reading is subject to the same forensic challenges as any other breath or blood test.

The 0.15 threshold is forensically contestable. Partition ratio, observation-period compliance, measurement uncertainty, GERD or other medical conditions, and test timing can all affect whether a reported reading above 0.15 accurately reflects the actual blood alcohol concentration at the time of driving. In Class A cases, every one of those issues matters more than it would on a standard Class B charge.

The Repeat-Offender Trap

A first-offense DWI is always tied, for the rest of the defendant’s life, to every subsequent alcohol-related arrest. Under Penal Code §49.09:

  • DWI 2nd. A second DWI conviction is a Class A misdemeanor with a minimum 72-hour jail term required, heightened by a prior DWI conviction of any age.
  • DWI 3rd or more. A third or subsequent DWI is a third-degree felony, punishable by 2 to 10 years in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and a fine of up to $10,000.
  • Intoxication Assault (§49.07) and Intoxication Manslaughter (§49.08). Prior DWI convictions can affect both charging decisions and sentencing ranges in subsequent intoxication assault and intoxication manslaughter cases.

In other words, the first DWI is not just this case. It is the baseline that every future case is measured against. That is another reason the fight on a first offense matters more than it looks. A conviction today raises the stakes on every alcohol-related incident for the rest of the defendant’s life.

Consequences That Follow You Out of Court

The criminal penalties are only one part of what a first-offense DWI actually costs. The collateral consequences are treated in detail in the pillar post for this series, but they are worth naming briefly here because they often outweigh the courtroom consequences:

  • Background checks. A DWI conviction appears on standard criminal background checks for life absent a successful non-disclosure petition.
  • Employment and professional licensing. Current employment, future employment, and professional licensing across dozens of fields can all be affected.
  • Commercial driving. A single DWI conviction in any vehicle triggers a one-year commercial driver’s license disqualification under federal rules.
  • Auto insurance rates rise sharply, SR-22 filings are commonly required, and some carriers drop the driver.
  • For non-citizens, a DWI can have serious immigration consequences that require coordination between criminal and immigration counsel.
  • Security clearances, military service, and federal employment. All can be affected by a DWI conviction, and in many cases by the arrest alone.

The jail exposure, the fine, and the interlock are the penalties you see. The insurance, the licensing, the background check, and the professional fallout are the penalties you live with.

Are the Penalties Negotiable?

Yes, in most cases, and in more ways than defendants realize:

  • Reduced charges. Obstruction of a passageway, reckless driving, and in some cases other non-intoxication offenses may be available in place of a DWI conviction. These alternatives carry meaningfully different collateral consequences.
  • Deferred adjudication under HB 3582. For first-offense DWI cases with a BAC below 0.15 and no prior DWI, deferred adjudication is available as an alternative to straight probation. Successful completion results in no final conviction.
  • Reduced sentences. Lower fine, shorter probation, reduced community service, no additional jail time, interlock shortened are all negotiable.
  • Pre-trial diversion in certain cases. Some counties offer diversion programs for qualifying first offenders.
  • Dismissal through suppression or trial. The best possible outcome on a DWI (a dismissed case or a not-guilty verdict) is achievable in cases where the State’s evidence does not survive forensic or procedural challenge.

The leverage that produces these outcomes comes from the same place it always does: a defense that understands the law and the science, that runs the ALR hearing, that files motions where they are warranted, and that shows the prosecutor that the case will be harder to win than the next one on the docket.

The Bottom Line

A first-offense DWI in Texas is a Class B misdemeanor (Class A if the BAC is 0.15 or higher) carrying jail exposure, fines, license suspension, probation conditions, and ignition interlock requirements, layered on top of collateral consequences that follow the defendant long after the sentence ends. The penalties on paper are only the starting point. What actually happens depends on the strength of the State’s evidence, the leverage the defense creates, and the disposition ultimately negotiated or won. A first DWI is not the end of the world, but it is not something to walk into alone.

DWI Defense at Deandra Grant Law

Deandra Grant Law defends DWI and intoxication-offense cases across North and Central Texas: Dallas, Fort Worth, Plano, McKinney, Frisco, Allen, Lewisville, Denton, Rockwall, and Waco. We handle first-offense DWI cases the same way we handle repeat-offender and felony cases with a full forensic evaluation of the evidence, a full collateral-consequence review for the specific client, and a clear plan for the ALR hearing, the motion practice, and the resolution. Our team includes an ACS-CHAL Forensic Lawyer-Scientist with a Master of Science in Pharmaceutical Science and a Graduate Certificate in Forensic Toxicology.

If you have been arrested for a first-offense DWI in Texas, call Deandra Grant Law at (214) 225-7117 or visit texasdwisite.com to schedule a confidential consultation. And do not forget that the 15-day ALR deadline runs from the date of service of the notice of suspension, independent of any criminal court setting.

Have a DWI question you want answered in this series? Submit it at texasdwisite.com. You might see it featured in a future Ask Deandra post.