Criminal Defense

Michigan’s Super Drunk Law: What Happens When BAC Is .17 or Higher

Josh Kaplan, Criminal Defense Attorney
Josh Kaplan, Esq.
Founding Partner — Criminal Defense
Updated April 2026 8 min read
Quick Answer

Michigan’s Super Drunk law (MCL 257.625(1)(c)) applies when your BAC is .17 or higher — more than double the legal limit. It is a first-offense misdemeanor but carries significantly harsher penalties than a standard OWI: up to 180 days in jail, fines up to $700, a 45-day hard license suspension followed by 320 days restricted with a mandatory ignition interlock device (BAIID), and up to 360 hours of community service. The charge can sometimes be reduced through plea negotiation, particularly when the BAC evidence can be challenged.

Michigan’s “Super Drunk” law was enacted in 2010 to impose heightened consequences on drivers arrested with extremely high blood alcohol levels. The statute recognizes that a BAC of .17 or above represents a significantly greater danger on the road than a BAC just over the legal limit. For anyone facing this charge, understanding both the enhanced penalties and the available defense strategies is critical — because a Super Drunk conviction carries consequences that affect your license, your freedom, and your daily life for nearly a year.

Super Drunk Penalties vs. Standard OWI

The differences between a standard first OWI and a Super Drunk charge are substantial. Both are misdemeanors for a first offense, but the penalties diverge significantly:

The practical impact is severe. A Super Drunk conviction means you cannot drive at all for 45 days, and then for nearly 11 months you can only drive with an ignition interlock device installed in your vehicle — at your expense. The BAIID costs $100–$200 for installation plus $75–$100 per month for monitoring, totaling $1,000–$1,500 or more over the restricted period.

What the Prosecution Must Prove

To convict under the Super Drunk statute, the prosecution must prove two things beyond a reasonable doubt:

The second element is where most defenses focus. The prosecution relies on breath or blood test results to establish the BAC, and those tests are not infallible. Challenging the accuracy and reliability of the BAC evidence is often the most effective defense strategy in a Super Drunk case.

Defense Strategies for High-BAC OWI Cases

A Super Drunk charge is not automatically a Super Drunk conviction. Several defense strategies apply specifically to high-BAC cases:

Challenging the breath test (DataMaster):

Challenging the blood test:

The rising blood alcohol defense:

Medical conditions affecting test results:

Plea Negotiation: Reducing a Super Drunk Charge

One of the most important aspects of OWI defense in a Super Drunk case is the possibility of a plea reduction. Prosecutors have discretion to reduce a Super Drunk charge to:

Whether a reduction is available depends on several factors: the strength of the BAC evidence, your criminal history, the specific facts of the stop and arrest, and the policies of the particular prosecutor’s office. Successfully identifying weaknesses in the BAC evidence — calibration issues, observation period violations, chain-of-custody problems — significantly strengthens your negotiating position.

A BAC of exactly .17 is more negotiable than a BAC of .22. The closer your test result is to the .17 threshold, the more room there is to argue that the true BAC may have been below .17 due to testing margin of error, rising blood alcohol, or device variability. Higher BAC readings reduce but do not eliminate this argument.

What to Expect After a Super Drunk Conviction

If convicted of Super Drunk OWI, you should expect the following timeline:

Frequently Asked Questions About Michigan’s Super Drunk Law

What is Michigan’s Super Drunk law?
Michigan’s Super Drunk law (MCL 257.625(1)(c)) applies when a driver’s BAC is .17 or higher. It carries up to 180 days in jail, fines up to $700, a 45-day hard license suspension followed by 320 days restricted with a mandatory ignition interlock device (BAIID), and up to 360 hours of community service.
What are the penalties for Super Drunk OWI vs. standard OWI in Michigan?
A standard first OWI carries up to 93 days in jail, fines up to $500, and a 30-day suspension followed by 150 days restricted. Super Drunk carries up to 180 days in jail, fines up to $700, a 45-day suspension followed by 320 days restricted with a mandatory BAIID. The license restrictions are substantially longer and more burdensome.
Can a Super Drunk charge be reduced to a standard OWI in Michigan?
Yes, in some cases. Prosecutors may offer a plea reduction to standard OWI or OWVI depending on the strength of the BAC evidence, your criminal history, and the specific facts. Successfully challenging the accuracy of the breath or blood test is often key to negotiating a reduction.
What is a BAIID and how long is it required for Super Drunk OWI?
A BAIID (Breath Alcohol Ignition Interlock Device) is a breathalyzer installed in your vehicle that requires a clean breath sample before the engine will start. For a Super Drunk conviction, it is mandatory for the entire 320-day restricted license period. Installation and monthly monitoring typically cost $1,000 to $1,500 or more total.
How can a high-BAC breathalyzer result be challenged in Michigan?
High-BAC results can be challenged through improper device calibration or maintenance, failure to follow the 15-minute observation period, operator errors, the rising blood alcohol defense, medical conditions that produce false readings (GERD, diabetes), and contamination or chain-of-custody issues with blood samples.
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Charged with Super Drunk OWI in Michigan?

A high BAC does not mean an automatic conviction. Josh Kaplan challenges breath and blood test evidence, negotiates charge reductions, and defends Super Drunk cases throughout Oakland County and Southeast Michigan. Contact us for a confidential consultation.

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