Rhode Island DUI Laws Rank As 34th Strictest in USA
Rhode Island DUI laws rank in the middle nationally — a 2018 WalletHub comparative study placed Rhode Island 34th strictest in the country. That ranking is often cited as evidence that Rhode Island goes "easy" on DUI offenders. The reality is more nuanced: Rhode Island's misdemeanor penalties are middling on a national scale, but the felony enhancement at third offense (1 to 5 years state prison under RIGL § 31-27-2(d)(3)) is comparable to most states, and the chemical test refusal penalties under § 31-27-2.1 are stricter than the national average.
This page puts Rhode Island's DUI framework in national context. For complete penalty detail, see Rhode Island DUI penalties. For the underlying statutory framework, see Rhode Island DUI laws.
How Rhode Island Compares to Neighbors
| State | 1st Offense Jail Max | 1st Offense License Loss | 3rd Offense Felony? | Lookback Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rhode Island | 1 year | 30–180 days (BAC 0.08–0.10) | Yes (within 5 years) | 5 years |
| Massachusetts | 2.5 years | Up to 1 year | Yes (always — no lookback) | Lifetime |
| Connecticut | 6 months | 45 days | Yes (within 10 years) | 10 years |
Massachusetts is the regional outlier — lifetime lookback is among the strictest in the U.S., and the maximum first-offense jail of 2.5 years exceeds Rhode Island's 1 year by 150%. Rhode Island sits between MA and CT in most categories.
Where Rhode Island Is Stricter Than Average
- Refusal penalties: Rhode Island's first-refusal suspension of 6 to 12 months exceeds the national median
- Lookback for sentencing enhancement: 5-year arrest-to-arrest is meaningfully strict; states with shorter lookbacks (1 to 3 years) treat repeat offenders less harshly
- Mandatory minimum on second offense: 10 days mandatory jail with at least 48 consecutive hours is firmer than many states' "reasonable jail time" provisions
- No expungement: RIGL § 12-1.3-2 specifically excludes DUI from expungement — many states allow some path to expungement after a waiting period
- Ignition interlock at BAC 0.15+: Rhode Island's mandatory interlock for high-BAC first offenses is in line with current national best practice
Where Rhode Island Is Less Strict Than Average
- Maximum first-offense jail: 1 year is among the lower maximums (compare MA's 2.5 years)
- Average first-offense fine: $100 to $300 at the lowest BAC tier is below the national median for first DUI fines
- BAC tier-1 license suspension: 30 days is the lowest in any New England state at that BAC level
Recent Tightening
Rhode Island's DUI laws have generally tightened since 2014. Ignition interlock thresholds have lowered. Refusal penalties have increased. The lookback window remains 5 years (some states have moved toward longer lookbacks). For a year-by-year breakdown of recent statutory changes, see Rhode Island DUI laws.
What "34th Strictest" Means in Practice
National rankings are useful for comparison but misleading on the ground. A first-offense Rhode Island DUI still results in a permanent criminal record, a 3-year SR-22 obligation, license suspension, mandatory alcohol education, and roughly $8,000 to $17,000 in total cost over the SR-22 period. "34th strictest" does not mean "easy" — it means there are 33 states where the penalty package is even more aggressive.
Free Consultation
For a confidential consultation on a Rhode Island DUI case, contact The Law Office of Chad F. Bank — available 24/7 at 401-573-2265.
