Second DUI Lawyer in Phoenix
Charged with a second DUI in Phoenix within 84 months? The penalties jump hard: a Class 1 misdemeanor with a mandatory minimum 90 days in jail, fines over $3,000, a one-year license revocation, and an interlock. Whether a prior actually counts is often the key to the defense.
As Seen On
Recognized By
What Is the Penalty for a Second DUI in Phoenix?
Quick answer: A second DUI within 84 months is still a Class 1 misdemeanor, but penalties escalate sharply: a minimum of 90 days in jail (30 served), $3,000+ in fines, a one-year license revocation, community service, and a 12-month interlock. Whether a prior counts within the 84-month window is often where the case is won. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7.
Both Sides
Former Prosecutors · Law Enforcement · Public Defenders
When you call Tamou Law Group, you reach a firm that handles criminal defense exclusively, with serious experience defending second dui in Phoenix and other DUI cases across Arizona. Our team includes former prosecutors and law enforcement officers, so we know exactly how the State builds these cases, and where they fall apart.
At many large firms, the name on the building is a marketing figurehead, you rarely get them on the phone and your case goes to a junior associate. When you hire Tamou Law Group, your case is handled by a full team of attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou.
On This Page
If you’ve been charged with second dui in Phoenix in Arizona, you probably have urgent questions about what you’re facing and what comes next. Here are straight answers to the questions people ask most, with a plain-English breakdown of the law under A.R.S. § 28-1381, the penalties, and the defenses that matter most.
What Is the Penalty for a Second DUI in Phoenix?
A second DUI within 84 months is still a Class 1 misdemeanor, but penalties escalate sharply: a minimum of 90 days in jail (30 served), $3,000+ in fines, a one-year license revocation, community service, and a 12-month interlock. Whether a prior counts within the 84-month window is often where the case is won. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7.
Will You Lose Your License? The Phoenix DUI Suspension Process
Your License Is on a Separate 15-Day Clock
A Phoenix DUI starts a license suspension at the MVD that is completely separate from your criminal case, and it can take effect even before any conviction. A BAC of .08 or higher means a 90-day suspension (admin per se, A.R.S. 28-1385); refusing the breath or blood test means a 12-month suspension (implied consent, A.R.S. 28-1321). You have only 15 days from your arrest to stop it.
The Suspension
Under admin per se (A.R.S. 28-1385) a BAC of .08+ suspends your license for 90 days; refusing the test (A.R.S. 28-1321) is a 12-month suspension. This MVD action is separate from court and can hit even if your criminal case is later dismissed.
How We Move to Stop It
We file your MVD hearing request within the 15-day window, which puts the suspension on hold while we fight. Then we attack the stop, the breath or blood result, and whether the implied-consent advisory was properly read to you.
The Hearing & Keeping You Driving
At the MVD hearing the State must prove the basis for the suspension, and we cross-examine the arresting officer. If a suspension still applies, we get you a Special Ignition Interlock Restricted License so you can keep driving to work, school, and treatment.
How We Defend a Second DUI in Phoenix
Winning a DUI starts with taking apart how the State built its case. We examine the stop, whether the field sobriety tests met NHTSA standards, the calibration and 15-minute observation behind the breath test, the blood draw and chain of custody, and rising-BAC, then we protect your license at the separate 15-day MVD hearing.
Second DUI Penalties by BAC & Prior
Arizona DUI penalties climb with your BAC and with each prior DUI in the last 84 months. Here is how the mandatory minimum jail time escalates.
| Offense (within 84 months) | Standard DUI (.08–.149) | Extreme DUI (.15–.199) | Super Extreme (.20+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st offense | 10 days | 30 days | 45 days |
| 2nd offense | 90 days | 120 days | 180 days |
| 3rd offense | Felony: 4 months prison | Felony: 4 months prison | Felony: 4 months prison |
Minimums only; on a first offense a court may suspend part of the jail term after alcohol screening. A 3rd DUI within 84 months is an aggravated (felony) DUI under A.R.S. 28-1383.
What the State Must Prove for Second DUI in Phoenix
To convict you of Second DUI in Phoenix under A.R.S. § 28-1381, the prosecutor must prove every one of these elements beyond a reasonable doubt. If even one fails, the charge fails.
- 1Driving or actual physical control. You were driving, or in actual physical control of, a vehicle in Phoenix.
- 2Impairment or a prohibited BAC. You were impaired to the slightest degree, or had the BAC this charge requires.
- 3A lawful stop. Police had reasonable suspicion to stop you and probable cause to arrest, both challengeable.
- 4Reliable testing. The breath or blood test was properly calibrated, administered, and preserved.
Examples of Conduct Charged as Second DUI in Phoenix
- A second dui with a borderline BAC reading
- A second dui after a questionable traffic stop
- A second dui where the breath machine was out of calibration
- A second dui with a rising-BAC timing defense
What Sentence Could You Actually Face?
A second dui carries mandatory minimum penalties that rise with BAC and priors, but are frequently reduced.
Standard
.08–.149 BAC
Extreme
.15–.199 BAC
Super Extreme
.20+ BAC
⚠ The 84-Month Window Is Everything
A prior DUI only elevates your case if it falls within 84 months and is a valid conviction. If a prior is too old or uncounseled, it may not count, dropping you back to first-offense penalties and eliminating the 90-day minimum.
Estimate Phoenix DUI Penalties: Jail, Fines & Fees
See the mandatory minimums for your situation in seconds.
Arizona DUI Penalty Estimator — Jail, Fines & Fees
How We Fight Arizona Second DUI in Phoenix Cases
Every case has weak points. These are the defenses we look at first.
Attacking the Stop & the Test
No Reasonable Suspicion for the Stop. If police lacked a lawful reason to pull you over, the evidence that followed can be suppressed.
Breath-Test Errors. Intoxilyzer machines must be calibrated and maintained; radio interference, mouth alcohol, and operator error inflate readings.
Blood-Draw & Chain-of-Custody Problems. An improper draw, unqualified phlebotomist, fermentation, or a broken chain can make a blood result inadmissible.
Rising BAC. Your BAC may have been below the limit while driving and only rose by the time of testing.
No Actual Physical Control. Sitting in a parked car is not always driving.
Protecting Your License & Record
The 15-Day MVD Hearing. Requesting an MVD hearing within 15 days preserves your license while we fight the case.
Reduction to Reckless Driving. With problems in the stop or testing, a DUI can drop to reckless driving, no mandatory interlock.
Priors Outside 84 Months. A prior that falls outside the seven-year window may not count, dropping the offense to a lower tier.
Mitigation & Screening. Treatment, screening, and a strong record can reduce jail time and protect your ability to drive.
The Experts We Bring to the Table
Drug cases are built on lab reports, searches, and informants. We bring the specialists who take them apart.
Forensic Chemists & Toxicologists
Drug ID & Weight
Independently test the substance and its usable weight, the elements the State must prove, and expose flawed lab work.
Search & Seizure Analysts
How the Drugs Were Found
Reconstruct the stop, the search, and the warrant to find the Fourth Amendment violations that get evidence suppressed.
Informant & Buy Experts
Controlled Buys
Scrutinize confidential informants, controlled-buy procedure, and inducement, the weak core of many sale cases.
Chain-of-Custody Analysts
Evidence Handling
Trace the drugs from seizure to lab and expose gaps, mislabeling, and contamination that make the evidence unreliable.
Digital Forensics Experts
Texts & ‘For Sale’ Proof
Examine phone and message evidence the State uses to argue intent to sell, and challenge what it actually proves.
Treatment & Mitigation Specialists
Drug Court & Diversion
Build the case for TASC, drug court, and treatment-based resolutions that avoid a conviction or prison.
Recent Second DUI in Phoenix Defense Results
Every case is unique and results depend on the facts, but these examples reflect how our firm handles second dui in Phoenix cases across Arizona.
Second DUI, Bad Stop
Dismissed
We suppressed the stop and the test; the case was dismissed.
Second DUI, Breath Test
Reduced
Calibration failures undercut the reading; reduced to reckless driving.
Second DUI, Rising BAC
Not Guilty
We showed the BAC rose after driving; the jury acquitted.
Second DUI, Blood Draw
Suppressed
A warrantless blood draw was suppressed, gutting the State’s proof.
Second DUI, Prior Excluded
Tier Reduced
An alleged prior fell outside 84 months and was excluded.
Second DUI, MVD Hearing
License Saved
We won the 15-day MVD hearing; our client kept driving.
What Clients Say About Tamou Law
Real Google reviews from clients we have defended across Phoenix and Maricopa County. Every review is from a criminal defense client, never padded with non-legal work.
Clients reach us searching for a second dui lawyer in Phoenix, second dui attorney Phoenix, and a Phoenix DUI lawyer. Our Phoenix criminal defense lawyers and Scottsdale criminal defense attorneys defend second dui in Phoenix and other DUI cases across Phoenix, Scottsdale, Mesa, Tempe, Chandler, Gilbert, Glendale, Peoria, and all of Maricopa County, from offices in both cities. This page is part of our Arizona phoenix dui practice. Call 623-321-4699 or contact our team for a free, confidential consultation, 24/7.
Arizona Second DUI in Phoenix FAQs
Quick answers to the questions we hear most about second dui in Phoenix charges, penalties, and defenses in Arizona.
How much jail time for a second DUI in Phoenix?
A second DUI within 84 months carries a minimum of 90 days in jail, with 30 served consecutively. Whether the prior counts is where the defense focuses.
What is the 84-month rule for DUI in Arizona?
Arizona counts a prior DUI if it occurred within 84 months (seven years). If the prior is outside that window or invalid, your case may be treated as a first offense.
Can a second DUI be reduced to a first offense?
Sometimes. If the prior is outside 84 months, uncounseled, or otherwise invalid, it may not count, dropping you to first-offense penalties.
What happens on your second DUI in Arizona?
Beyond 90 days jail and $3,000+ in fines, you face a one-year license revocation and mandatory interlock, but the prior and the current stop/testing are all challengeable.
Can a Phoenix DUI be reduced to reckless driving?
Yes. With problems in the stop, the testing, or the evidence, a DUI can be reduced to reckless driving, which means less jail, lower fines, and no mandatory ignition interlock.
Will I lose my license after a Phoenix DUI?
A DUI arrest triggers a separate MVD suspension under A.R.S. 28-1385. You have only 15 days to request an MVD hearing to protect your license, so call 623-321-4699 right away.
Can I refuse a breath or blood test in Arizona?
Under Arizona’s implied consent law (A.R.S. 28-1321), refusing a test triggers an automatic 12-month license suspension, and police can still get a warrant for your blood. Whether you refused or not, the testing is challengeable.
Will I get a real attorney or a junior associate?
Your defense is handled by a full team of experienced attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou. Call 623-321-4699, 24/7.
Key Takeaways
- Second DUI in Phoenix is charged under A.R.S. § 28-1381, with mandatory penalties that an arrest alone does not prove.
- You have just 15 days from arrest to request an MVD hearing to protect your license.
- The breath or blood test, the stop, and the arrest are all challengeable, often reducing or dismissing the charge.
- This page is part of our Phoenix DUI defense practice; see the statewide DUI hub for every charge.
- Your case is handled by a full team of attorneys, not associates, including Michael Tamou, 24/7 at 623-321-4699.
Two Arizona Offices, One Team
We serve all of Maricopa County and the surrounding area, with free, confidential consultations 24/7 by phone and in-person meetings at either office by appointment.
Case Results Disclaimer: The results described on this page are based on specific facts and circumstances and do not guarantee or predict a similar outcome in any future case. Every case is different. Past results do not guarantee future results. No attorney-client relationship is formed by viewing this page or submitting a contact form until a written fee agreement has been signed. Tamou Law Group, PLLC is licensed to practice law in the State of Arizona. This website is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.






