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DUI vs. DWI in North Carolina: What’s the Difference?

Quick Summary
  • In North Carolina, DUI and DWI are the same thing. The state combined both into a single charge called DWI (Driving While Impaired) back in 1983.
  • NC sentences DWI on a six-level scale, from Level 5 (least serious) up to Aggravated Level 1 (most serious), based on the factors in your case.
  • Refusing a breath test triggers an automatic 12-month revocation on its own, even if you aren’t convicted for the DWI.
  • The penalties stack up quickly, so talking with a Charlotte DWI attorney early can shape the outcome of your case.

What Is the Difference Between DUI and DWI in North Carolina?

In North Carolina, there is no difference between DUI and DWI. They’re the same charge.

In some states, DUI (Driving Under the Influence) and DWI (Driving While Impaired) are two separate offenses with different penalties. In 1983, North Carolina’s Safe Roads Act folded every impaired driving offense into one charge: Driving While Impaired, or DWI. So whether you call it a DUI or a DWI, you’re describing the same thing under NC law.

The word you use doesn’t change the charge or how the court treats it. What matters is what happened in your case and how it’s defended.

DWI in NC: How an Impaired Driving Charge Works

A DWI charge starts when an officer has reason to think you’ve been driving impaired, whether that’s from a traffic stop, the way you were driving, an accident, or a checkpoint. From there, they may ask you to step out for field sobriety tests and request a breath test.

Something worth noting: North Carolina has an implied consent law (under N.C.G.S. § 20-16.2.) When you drive on state roads, you’ve already agreed to take a chemical test (usually a breath test) if you’re lawfully arrested for impaired driving. Refusing that test leads to an automatic one-year license revocation, even if you’re never convicted of the DWI itself. Field sobriety tests (e.g., the one-leg stand or the “walk-and-turn test”) are different, and you can decline those without that specific penalty.

The legal limit is a blood alcohol concentration of 0.08%. For commercial drivers it drops to 0.04%, and for anyone under 21, North Carolina has a zero-tolerance rule for any measurable alcohol.

You Can Lose Your License Before You Ever See a Judge

Most people don’t realize a DWI can cost them their license immediately, before any trial or conviction. In North Carolina, there are actually three separate ways a DWI can take your license, and they stack.

The 30-day civil revocation. If you blow a 0.08 or higher, the magistrate takes your license at the time of arrest. You can’t drive at all for the first 10 days. After that, if you qualify, a DWI lawyer can help you petition for a limited driving privilege which can let you keep driving to work or treatment during a revocation. Once 30 days pass, you pay a fee to the clerk of court and get your license back while your case is still pending.

The refusal revocation. Refusing the breath test triggers a separate 12-month revocation through the DMV. This one sticks no matter how your case turns out, so you could have the charge dismissed and still lose your license for a year. Under N.C.G.S. § 20-16.2(d), you have exactly 10 days to request a DMV hearing in writing to challenge it. 

The conviction revocation. If you’re convicted, a first DWI carries another one-year revocation starting from the conviction date. A limited privilege may be available during this period too.

What Are the Levels of DUI (DWI) in North Carolina?

This is where a lot of the confusion (and worry) comes from. North Carolina doesn’t sentence DWI on a “first offense, second offense” system. A judge weighs the facts of your case and assigns one of six sentencing levels.

The judge looks at three kinds of factors:

  • Grossly aggravating factors carry the most weight. These include a prior impaired driving conviction within seven years, driving on a license already revoked for impaired driving, causing serious injury, or having a child under 18 (or certain other vulnerable passengers) in the car.
  • Aggravating factors make things worse, like a BAC of 0.15 or higher or driving recklessly at the time of the offense.
  • Mitigating factors help you, such as a safe driving record or voluntarily getting a substance abuse assessment and treatment.

The balance of those factors contributes to your level. Just one grossly aggravating factor pushes you to Level 2 or higher. Two or more can land you at Level 1 or Aggravated Level 1.

By the numbers

Most DWI cases land at the lowest sentencing level. In 2024, the North Carolina Sentencing and Policy Advisory Commission reported that roughly 60% of DWI offenders were sentenced at Level 5, the least severe of the state’s six levels, and 94% received probation rather than active jail time.

NC DWI Sentencing Chart

Here’s a look at NC’s DWI sentencing levels. Keep in mind these are statutory ranges, and your actual outcome depends on the facts of your case.

Sentencing LevelWhen It AppliesFine (up to)Jail Time
Level 5Mitigating factors outweigh aggravating$20024 hours – 60 days
Level 4Factors roughly balance out$50048 hours – 120 days
Level 3Aggravating factors outweigh mitigating$1,00072 hours – 6 months
Level 2One grossly aggravating factor$2,0007 days – 1 year
Level 1Two grossly aggravating factors$4,00030 days – 2 years
Aggravated Level 1Three or more grossly aggravating factors$10,00012 months – 3 years

In every level, the court also requires a substance abuse assessment and completion of any recommended education or treatment. Many drivers also become eligible for limited driving privileges under certain conditions.

Talk to a Charlotte, NC DWI Attorney at Dozier Miller

A DWI charge reaches well past the courtroom. It can affect how you get to work, whether you keep your license, and how you’ll handle the fines that come with it. Those are the real questions running through your head, and they deserve real answers.

The criminal defense attorneys at Dozier Miller Law Group have spent decades defending DWI/ DUI cases throughout Charlotte and Mecklenburg County. We know the local court processes along with the administrative side that runs beside them, and we put that familiarity to work evaluating your case, weighing a plea against trial, and pushing for the best outcome available to you.

We serve drivers across the greater Charlotte area, with a second office in Lake Norman near Birkdale Village serving Huntersville, Cornelius, Davidson, and Mooresville. Schedule a consultation or call 704-372-6373, and let’s talk through where your case stands.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a DWI as bad as a DUI?

In North Carolina, they’re the same charge, so neither is “worse” than the other. What is called a DUI (Driving Under the Influence) in some states is a DWI (Driving While Impaired) in North Carolina.

Do you go to jail for a DWI in NC?

Sometimes, but not always. For lower-level first offenses with no aggravating factors, judges often suspend jail time after a short minimum (such as 24 hours) and substitute community service. Higher levels carry mandatory minimum jail time, which is part of why your sentencing level matters so much.

What happens when you get a DWI (DUI) for the first time in NC?

A first-time charge with no aggravating factors usually falls toward Level 5, with a fine up to $200, a minimum jail requirement that may be converted to community service, and a one-year license revocation. You’ll also need a substance abuse assessment. The details vary case to case, so don’t assume your situation is “standard.”

Do you lose your license immediately after a DWI in NC?

You can. North Carolina can impose an immediate civil revocation after an arrest in certain situations, and refusing the breath test brings an automatic 12-month revocation. If your license is revoked for refusing a chemical test, N.C.G.S. § 20-16.2(d) grants you exactly 10 days to submit a written request for a DMV hearing. If you miss the 10-day deadline, you forfeit your right to challenge the 12-month refusal revocation.

Can a DWI be reduced or dropped in NC?

It’s possible depending on the facts. A defense attorney may challenge the traffic stop, the field sobriety tests, the breath test results, or how the evidence was handled. Whether a charge can be reduced or dismissed comes down to the specifics, which is exactly what a consultation with a Charlotte DUI lawyer is for.

How long does a DWI stay on your record in NC?

A DWI conviction stays on your North Carolina record permanently in most cases. Expungement is rare and generally limited to situations like a dismissed charge or a successful appeal. That permanence is one more reason a strong defense up front is worth it.

Is a DWI a felony in NC?

Most DWIs are misdemeanors. But a charge can become a felony in serious situations, such as habitual DWI (multiple convictions within a set period) or impaired driving that causes serious injury or death. These cases carry much harsher penalties, including prison time.

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