Tennessee DUI license suspension hearings (administrative) are SEPARATE from criminal proceedings — typically have 7-30 day deadline to request, lower burden of proof, but can save your license.
Published May 9, 2026
## DUI license suspension hearings in Tennessee
When arrested for DUI in Tennessee, your license is typically suspended ADMINISTRATIVELY by the state DMV/DOL — separate from any criminal case. You have a TIGHT deadline to request an administrative hearing or lose your license without contest.
## Two parallel processes
**Two separate suspension paths:**
**1. Administrative (DMV/DOL):**
- Civil action by state
- Suspends license
- Lower burden of proof
- Limited issues
- Hearing officer (not judge)
- Specific procedures + deadlines
**2. Criminal (court):**
- DUI prosecution
- Conviction = additional license suspension
- Higher burden (beyond reasonable doubt)
- Court / jury
- Different procedures + deadlines
**Both can suspend license** — administrative is independent.
## Administrative suspension basics
**Triggered by:**
- DUI arrest
- BAC at/above 0.08 (or 0.04 for CDL, 0.02 for under 21)
- OR refusal to take chemical test
- Officer's report to DMV
- Specific procedures vary by state
**Effect:**
- Officer takes physical license
- Issues temporary driving permit
- License suspended after specific period
- Notice of suspension sent
- Hearing right offered
## Critical deadline — request hearing
**Time limits vary by state:**
- **7 days** in some states (CA)
- **10 days** in many
- **15 days** in some
- **30 days** in others
- ${s.name} has specific deadline
**MISS THE DEADLINE = SUSPENSION AUTOMATIC.**
## What hearing addresses
**Limited issues:**
**1. Did officer have basis for stop?**
- Reasonable suspicion
- Specific articulable facts
**2. Did officer have probable cause to arrest?**
- DUI investigation
- Field sobriety tests
- Officer observations
**3. Was implied consent properly applied?**
- Implied consent advisement read
- Specific language used
- Subject understood
- Refusal recognized
**4. Was chemical test result accurate?**
- BAC level
- Calibration of machine
- Specific procedures
- Officer certification
**5. Was test taken within statutory time?**
- Time from driving
- Time from arrest
- Specific window
**Limited focus** — not full DUI defense.
## Burden of proof
**State must show:**
- Preponderance of evidence (lower standard)
- Some states use higher standard
- Officer's report often presumed correct
- Defendant has burden to challenge
**Different from criminal trial** (beyond reasonable doubt).
## Hearing process
**1. Request hearing:**
- File request with DMV/DOL
- Specific form usually
- Within deadline
- Pay fee in some states
**2. Receive hearing date:**
- Usually 30-90 days out
- Some states schedule quickly
- Continuance available sometimes
**3. Discovery:**
- Police report
- BAC results
- Officer's notes
- Calibration records
- Limited compared to criminal discovery
**4. Hearing:**
- Hearing officer (not judge)
- Officer testimony (sometimes telephonic / video)
- Defendant testimony
- Witnesses if relevant
- Documents introduced
**5. Decision:**
- Often same day
- Or within specific time
- Written decision
- Right to appeal
## License suspension periods
**Typical:**
**First DUI:**
- 30 days to 1 year administrative
- Often shorter than criminal suspension
- Hardship license sometimes available
**Refusal:**
- Often 1-3 years
- Longer than DUI conviction
- Some states no hardship license
**Repeat offenders:**
- Significantly longer
- Sometimes lifetime
- Limited hardship options
**${s.name} specific** suspension periods.
## Hardship / restricted licenses
**Often available:**
**Allows:**
- Driving to work
- Driving to medical appointments
- Driving children
- Specific essential travel
**Requirements:**
- Application + fee
- Insurance
- Sometimes ignition interlock
- Specific time period restrictions
- Specific eligibility
**Not available for:**
- Refusal in some states
- Repeat offenders sometimes
- Specific aggravating factors
- Drug DUIs in some states
## Ignition interlock
**Required in many states:**
- After certain DUIs
- After refusals
- Even after first offense in some states
- Costs $70-$150/month
- Plus installation
- Calibration / maintenance
- Reporting
**${s.name} requirements** vary by offense + circumstances.
## Why administrative hearing matters
**Reasons to request:**
1. **Save your license** — may avoid suspension entirely
2. **Discover evidence** — preview state's case
3. **Officer testimony** — preview at hearing
4. **Inconsistencies** — set up criminal defense
5. **Buy time** — temporary license during pendency
6. **Negotiate** — sometimes state offers settlement
7. **Hardship license** — may be granted
## Strategic considerations
**Even if losing seems likely:**
- Hearing reveals state's case
- Helps prepare criminal defense
- Officer's testimony locked in
- Documents disclosed
- Limited downside
**Cost-benefit:**
- Hearing costs $50-$1,000+ legal fees
- Loss of license = significant impact
- Most cases worth the effort
## Common winning issues
**Successful challenges:**
**1. Lack of stop basis:**
- No reasonable suspicion
- Officer's articulated facts insufficient
- Pretextual stop issues
**2. Defective implied consent:**
- Wrong language used
- Inadequate explanation
- Subject impaired understanding
- Translation issues
**3. Procedural errors:**
- Inadequate observation period
- Improper machine maintenance
- Calibration issues
- Operator certification problems
**4. Improper test administration:**
- Out-of-time testing
- Subject not properly advised
- Coercion
- Inadequate procedures
**5. Inadequate probable cause:**
- Officer's observations
- Field sobriety test administration
- Specific deficiencies
## Refusal cases
**Special considerations:**
- Often more severe consequences than DUI
- Limited hardship license eligibility
- Can be used as evidence in criminal case
- Specific procedural requirements
- Birchfield v. North Dakota implications
**Defenses to refusal:**
- Confused about choice
- Inadequate advisement
- Medical issues prevented compliance
- Sample failure not refusal
- Officer-induced confusion
## Out-of-state drivers
**Driver License Compact:**
- Most states share information
- Suspension follows you
- Home state may impose suspension
- Cannot escape by driving in different state
## Appeal process
**If lose hearing:**
**1. Administrative appeal:**
- DMV review
- Specific time + procedures
- Limited issues
**2. Court appeal:**
- Petition court of competent jurisdiction
- Limited review
- Specific grounds
- Often unsuccessful
## CDL drivers
**Special rules for commercial:**
- Lower BAC limit (0.04)
- Different suspension procedures
- More severe consequences
- See CDL DUI guide
## Underage drivers
**Zero tolerance:**
- 0.02% threshold (or any detectable)
- Different suspension periods
- Specific procedures
- More severe in some states
## Practical tips
**Immediately after DUI:**
- Note exact date of arrest
- Calculate hearing deadline
- File request promptly
- Hire DUI attorney
- Don't delay
**Documentation:**
- Save all paperwork from arrest
- Note interactions with officer
- Preserve any evidence
- Photos / location
- Witness contact info
## Cost of representation
**Administrative hearing:**
- $500-$3,000 typical attorney fees
- Worth it for license
- Often part of full DUI representation
- Some attorneys charge separately
## What you should do
If arrested for DUI in Tennessee: REQUEST ADMINISTRATIVE HEARING IMMEDIATELY (within 7-30 days depending on state). Hire a DUI attorney experienced with administrative hearings. Tennessee DUI attorneys typically handle both administrative + criminal. Don't miss the deadline — it's separate from criminal case + automatic suspension is hard to undo.
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*This guide is general information about Tennessee law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. License suspension hearings are time-sensitive. Talk to a licensed Tennessee DUI attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.