Charged with your first DUI in Fairfax County? A first offense is more serious than most people expect — it’s a criminal charge, not a traffic ticket — but it is also defensible. This page explains exactly what a first DUI means under Virginia law, what penalties you’re actually facing in Fairfax, what happens at the courthouse, and how a defense is built. If you’d rather just talk it through, call Ervin Law at (703) 962-7790 for a free consultation.
Virginia’s DUI law, Va. Code § 18.2-266, makes it illegal to drive or operate a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or any combination of the two — or with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.08% or higher for drivers 21 and over. (The threshold is 0.04% for commercial drivers and 0.02% for drivers under 21.)
You’ll see the charge written several ways. DWI (driving while intoxicated), DUI (driving under the influence), and DUID (driving under the influence of drugs) all fall under the same statute and are prosecuted the same way. In Fairfax County, your paperwork will usually say DWI. The label doesn’t change the stakes.
A first offense is a Class 1 misdemeanor — the most serious class of misdemeanor in Virginia. If you’re convicted, it stays on your criminal record permanently. That’s the part that surprises most first-time clients: this is not something that simply “comes off” your record after a few years.
For a first conviction under § 18.2-266, Virginia law provides for:
| Penalty | First offense |
|---|---|
| Jail | Up to 12 months (none mandatory if BAC is under 0.15 — see below) |
| Fine | $250 mandatory minimum, up to $2,500 (plus court costs) |
| License | One-year suspension of your Virginia driving privilege |
| VASAP | Mandatory enrollment and completion |
| DMV points | 6 demerit points |
| Ignition interlock | Required for at least 6 months if you get a restricted license |
If your BAC was elevated, Virginia takes away the judge’s discretion and requires a minimum jail term:
If you had a passenger under 18 in the vehicle, the law adds a mandatory minimum of 5 days in jail plus an additional fine of $500 to $1,000.
Below a 0.15 BAC, there is no mandatory jail on a first offense — but jail remains a possibility, and the other consequences still apply.
Separate from anything the court later decides, a first DUI arrest in Virginia typically triggers an immediate 7-day administrative license suspension. This is automatic and happens before your trial. After the 7 days, you can usually retrieve your license from the clerk’s office while your case is pending.
If you refused a breath or blood test after arrest, the consequences are different and more severe — see below.
VASAP — the Virginia Alcohol Safety Action Program — is a mandatory condition of a DUI conviction. It begins with an alcohol and drug assessment, followed by an education program (commonly around 10 weeks of classes) and, depending on the assessment, possible treatment. There is no way around VASAP if you’re convicted, even when the charge involved prescription medication rather than alcohol. Completing it is also a prerequisite to clearing your license with the DMV.
During your one-year suspension, you can petition the court for a restricted license that permits driving for specific purposes — to and from work, school, medical appointments, VASAP, court, and similar court-approved activities. You cannot drive outside those limits; doing so is a new criminal charge for driving on a suspended license.
To get a restricted license after a DUI conviction, Virginia requires installing an ignition interlock device (IID) for a minimum of six months. The IID requires a breath sample before the car will start and at intervals while you drive, and it logs every reading. Installation and monitoring are at your expense.
Under Virginia’s implied consent law, refusing a post-arrest breath or blood test carries its own administrative penalty, separate from the DUI itself. A first refusal generally results in a 12-month license suspension with no restricted-license option during that period. Refusal issues add a second front to the case and need to be handled carefully — they don’t automatically make the DUI provable, and they don’t automatically sink your defense either.
Fairfax County first-offense DUI cases are heard at the Fairfax County General District Court, 4110 Chain Bridge Road, Fairfax, VA 22030 — a few hundred yards from our office. A typical timeline looks like this:
The weeks before trial are when the real work happens — reviewing the stop, the officer’s observations, the testing, and the paperwork. Early preparation matters.
A first DUI reaches past the courtroom:
Sometimes — but it depends entirely on the facts, and no honest lawyer will promise an outcome. What a thorough defense examines includes:
In some cases, depending on the evidence and the prosecutor, a DUI may be reduced to reckless driving, which avoids the mandatory license suspension and VASAP that come with a DUI conviction. This isn’t available in every case and isn’t guaranteed, but it’s one of several possible outcomes worth pursuing where the facts support it.
A first DUI is usually someone’s first time in the criminal system, and that’s exactly when good guidance matters most.
Justin Ervin has practiced criminal and traffic defense for 15 years, holds his law degree from George Mason University School of Law, and began his career at the D.C. Public Defender’s Office — trial experience defending people whose freedom was on the line. At Ervin Law, you work directly with the attorney handling your case, start to finish — never handed off to staff. Our office sits in the heart of Fairfax, steps from the courthouse where your case will be heard, and our clients have left hundreds of 5-star reviews.
Call (703) 962-7790 for a free consultation. The earlier we start, the more there is to work with.
No. A first offense is a Class 1 misdemeanor. A third DUI within ten years can be charged as a felony.
Not necessarily. If your BAC was under 0.15 and no aggravating factors apply, there’s no mandatory jail on a first offense, though jail remains possible. A BAC of 0.15–0.20 carries a 5-day mandatory minimum, and above 0.20 a 10-day mandatory minimum.
A first DUI conviction carries a one-year suspension. You may be eligible for a restricted license, which requires an ignition interlock device for at least six months.
Sometimes, depending on the facts and the prosecutor. It’s not guaranteed, but where the evidence supports it, a reduction avoids the mandatory DUI suspension and VASAP.
Yes, if you’re convicted — it’s mandatory and required to restore your license, even for a prescription-medication DUI.
Get advice early. The pre-trial period is when the stop, the testing, and the evidence get reviewed, and when the strongest position is built.
This page provides general information about Virginia DUI law and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Penalties and statutory provisions are current as of publication; verify against the current Code of Virginia. Ervin Law PLLC — attorney advertising.
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