The RegistryLos Angeles · California

DUI Defense Attorneys in Santa Monica, California

Counsel for the ten days that matter most — DMV hearings and DUI court defense. In Santa Monica, that work runs through Los Angeles County's courts, and this page holds the record: DUI defense coverage for Santa Monica drawn from official State Bar of California data, ranked by the published Growth Score.

Santa Monica is a city of roughly 91,000, and its DUI defense matters are heard at the Los Angeles County Superior Court — Santa Monica Courthouse. Westside civil matters are heard at the Santa Monica Courthouse on Main Street; the city administers its own rent control charter amendment, one of the strictest in California, which drives a distinctive landlord–tenant docket.

One date controls everything that follows: ten days from arrest to request the DMV administrative hearing, per Cal. Veh. Code § 13353.2. The DMV's administrative per se suspension is separate from the criminal case — missing the 10-day window forfeits the hearing. Most misdemeanor DUI charges must be filed within one year (Cal. Penal Code § 802). Read the record below with that clock in mind.

The clock & the craft

Statute of limitations

Ten days from arrest to request the DMV administrative hearing.

Cal. Veh. Code § 13353.2

The DMV's administrative per se suspension is separate from the criminal case — missing the 10-day window forfeits the hearing. Most misdemeanor DUI charges must be filed within one year (Cal. Penal Code § 802).

Reading the roster in Santa Monica

The first deadline is the case: ten days to request the DMV hearing, so contact counsel immediately after arrest. Look for attorneys who defend DUIs in the specific courthouse where the case will be heard, ask about their approach to the stop, the field tests, and the chemical-test evidence (calibration, rising-BAC, blood-draw procedure), and whether they staff the DMV hearing themselves. Flat fees by case stage are the norm in this practice.

DUI Defense · Los Angeles County roster

Registry indexing underway

195,000+ California attorneys are being verified against official State Bar of California records. Verified listings for DUI Defense · Los Angeles County will appear here as indexing completes.

Official State Bar data · Scored in the open · Updated daily

DUI Defense questions, cited

What happens to my license after a DUI arrest in California?

Two tracks run at once. The DMV's administrative per se process moves to suspend the license for driving at 0.08% BAC or higher (Cal. Veh. Code § 13353.2) — you have ten days from arrest to request a hearing, or the suspension takes effect automatically. The criminal case in superior court proceeds separately, and its outcome triggers its own license consequences (Veh. Code § 13352).

What are the penalties for a first DUI in California?

A first misdemeanor conviction typically carries three to five years of informal probation, fines and penalty assessments, a three-month (or longer) DUI program (Cal. Veh. Code § 23538), a license suspension with restricted-license options, and possible jail up to six months (Veh. Code § 23536). Most first offenders can drive with an ignition interlock device or restrictions under Veh. Code § 13352.4.

Can a DUI become a felony in California?

Yes — when it causes injury to another (Cal. Veh. Code § 23153, chargeable as a felony), when it is a fourth DUI within ten years (Veh. Code § 23550), or when the driver has a prior felony DUI (§ 23550.5). DUI causing death can be charged as gross vehicular manslaughter (Cal. Penal Code § 191.5) or, with prior DUI advisements, second-degree murder under People v. Watson (1981) 30 Cal.3d 290.

Do prior DUIs count against me, and for how long?

California uses a ten-year lookback: prior DUI and "wet reckless" convictions within ten years elevate the penalties for a new offense (Cal. Veh. Code § 23540, § 23546). A wet reckless plea under Veh. Code § 23103.5 reduces immediate penalties but still counts as a prior. Convictions also remain on the criminal record unless later dismissed under Penal Code § 1203.4.

Can I refuse a breath or blood test in California?

After a lawful DUI arrest, refusing chemical testing triggers a mandatory one-year license suspension for a first refusal under the implied consent law (Cal. Veh. Code § 23612, § 13353), on top of any DUI penalties — and the refusal is admissible. Pre-arrest handheld screening tests are generally optional for drivers 21 and over who are not on DUI probation.

Legal information, not legal advice.

From the answer files

Related counsel in Santa Monica

DUI Defense nearby

Read the record. Then decide.

Describe your matter once, weigh the published scores, and place the call — the choice is always yours.

Find Your Counsel

195,000+ attorneys · 58 counties · Scored in the open