Felony DUI Defense in Illinois

When a DUI charge escalates to a felony, you're facing prison time — not jail, prison. This is not a situation where you can afford anything less than the most experienced defense team available.

Understanding Felony DUI Charges in Illinois

Most DUI charges in Illinois are misdemeanors. But certain circumstances elevate a DUI to a felony — officially known as Aggravated Driving Under the Influence under 625 ILCS 5/11-501(d). When that happens, everything changes. The penalties become dramatically harsher. The courtroom dynamics shift. And your freedom is genuinely at risk.

A felony DUI conviction means a permanent criminal record that can never be expunged. It means potential years in an Illinois state prison — not months in county jail. It means the loss of your right to vote while incarcerated, potential loss of professional licenses, and lifelong consequences that extend far beyond the sentence itself. With felony-level revocations lasting 10 years or more, getting your license back requires a formal Secretary of State hearing — our attorneys handle the entire license reinstatement process.

Our attorneys are former prosecutors who handled felony DUI cases from the state's side. We've seen how these cases are built, how evidence is assembled, and where the prosecution's strategy has vulnerabilities. That experience is now yours. When the charges are this serious, you need attorneys who have been in these courtrooms, facing these stakes, and who know exactly what it takes to fight back.

What Makes a DUI a Felony in Illinois?

Under 625 ILCS 5/11-501(d), a DUI becomes a felony when any of these aggravating factors are present. Each carries different severity levels and mandatory minimums.

Third or Subsequent Offense

A third DUI is automatically a Class 2 felony carrying 3-7 years in state prison. A fourth DUI is also Class 2 but with mandatory prison time — no probation. A fifth offense jumps to a Class 1 felony (4-15 years), and a sixth becomes a Class X felony (6-30 years).

DUI Causing Bodily Harm

If you cause great bodily harm while driving under the influence, you face a Class 4 felony (1-3 years). If the injury causes permanent disability or disfigurement, it escalates to a Class 2 felony. DUI causing death carries 3-14 years mandatory prison — even for a first offense. If you or someone else was injured in a DUI-related accident, our personal injury team can also help pursue compensation.

DUI on Revoked/Suspended License

Driving under the influence while your license is already revoked or suspended due to a prior DUI is a Class 4 felony. This applies even if this is technically your second DUI offense — the suspended license elevates the charge regardless.

DUI with a Child Passenger

Driving under the influence with a passenger under 16 years old is a Class 4 felony for a first offense. If a child is injured, the charge escalates further. Additionally, DCFS may be notified, potentially triggering child endangerment proceedings.

DUI in a School Zone

Operating under the influence in a school zone — even if school is not in session — is a Class 4 felony. The enhanced penalties apply on active school days during designated hours and in school zone speed reduction areas.

DUI Without Insurance

A second or subsequent DUI committed while the driver has no valid liability insurance becomes a Class 4 felony. This provision catches drivers who may have lost coverage after a prior DUI and compounds their legal exposure significantly.

Felony DUI Sentences in Illinois

The sentencing ranges for felony DUI in Illinois are severe and escalate dramatically with each additional offense or aggravating factor.

Class 4 Felony DUI

Prison: 1 to 3 years
Extended term: 3 to 6 years
Probation: Available (up to 30 months)
Fines: Up to $25,000
Examples: DUI in school zone, DUI on revoked license, DUI with child under 16, second DUI without insurance

Class 2 Felony DUI

Prison: 3 to 7 years
Extended term: 7 to 14 years
Probation: Available for 3rd offense; NOT available for 4th
Fines: Up to $25,000
Examples: Third DUI, fourth DUI (mandatory prison), DUI causing permanent injury

Class 1 Felony DUI

Prison: 4 to 15 years
Extended term: 15 to 30 years
Probation: NOT available
Fines: Up to $25,000
Examples: Fifth DUI offense — mandatory prison with no alternative sentencing options

Class X Felony DUI

Prison: 6 to 30 years
Extended term: 30 to 60 years
Probation: NOT available
Fines: Up to $25,000
Examples: Sixth or subsequent DUI — the most serious DUI classification in Illinois

How We Fight Felony DUI Charges

Felony DUI defense requires a fundamentally different approach than misdemeanor DUI defense. The stakes are higher, the prosecution allocates more resources, and the legal complexity increases exponentially. Here's how our team — three former prosecutors working together — approaches these critical cases.

Challenging Prior Convictions

When a felony charge is based on the number of prior DUI offenses, every prior conviction must be valid. If a prior conviction was obtained without proper legal representation, without a valid guilty plea, or with procedural defects, it may be subject to collateral attack. Removing even one prior conviction from your record could reduce a felony charge back to a misdemeanor. Our team meticulously reviews court records from every prior case.

Contesting the Underlying DUI

Even in felony cases, the prosecution still has to prove the basic elements of DUI beyond a reasonable doubt. That means proving you were actually under the influence or had a BAC of 0.08 or above. We challenge traffic stops, breath and blood test procedures, chain of custody for blood samples, and the reliability of field sobriety testing — the same foundational challenges that work in misdemeanor cases, applied with felony-level intensity.

Investigating the Aggravating Factor

Every aggravating factor that elevates a DUI to a felony must be proven separately. Was the officer correct about the school zone boundaries? Was the child actually under 16? Was your license actually revoked for a DUI-related offense? We investigate every element the state must prove and look for weaknesses that can bring the charge back down.

Mitigation and Sentencing Advocacy

When the evidence is strong, aggressive sentencing advocacy becomes critical. We compile comprehensive mitigation packages — employment history, family circumstances, treatment records, community ties — to present to the judge. In cases where probation is legally available, we fight for it. When mandatory minimums apply, we advocate for the lowest possible term.

If you're facing felony DUI charges, do not speak to police or prosecutors without an attorney present. Anything you say can and will be used to strengthen the case against you. Call us at 847-520-4810 immediately — we're available 24/7 for emergencies.

Felony DUI Questions Answered

A DUI becomes a felony in Illinois when aggravating factors are present. The most common triggers include: a third or subsequent DUI offense (Class 2 felony), DUI causing great bodily harm or death (Class 4 or Class 2 felony), DUI while driving on a revoked or suspended license due to a prior DUI, DUI in a school zone, DUI without valid insurance, and DUI while transporting a child under 16.

A third DUI in Illinois is a Class 2 felony, punishable by 3 to 7 years in the Illinois Department of Corrections. There is no possibility of court supervision. The defendant's driver's license will be revoked for a minimum of 10 years, and they must complete a formal alcohol/drug treatment program. Probation may be available in some cases, but prison is a very real possibility.

Prison is mandatory for certain felony DUI offenses in Illinois. A fourth DUI (Class 2 felony) carries a mandatory minimum of 3 years in prison with no probation available. A fifth DUI is a Class 1 felony with 4 to 15 years mandatory. A sixth or subsequent DUI is a Class X felony with 6 to 30 years mandatory. DUI causing death (aggravated DUI) also carries mandatory prison sentences.

In some cases, yes. Depending on the circumstances and the strength of the evidence, an experienced defense attorney may negotiate to have felony DUI charges reduced. This is most feasible when the felony charge is based on a prior conviction that can be challenged, or when mitigating factors are strong. However, this is not guaranteed and requires skilled legal representation.

DUI causing great bodily harm is an aggravated DUI charge. If the injury constitutes "great bodily harm," it is charged as a Class 4 felony (1 to 3 years in prison). If the DUI results in permanent disability or disfigurement, it can be charged as a Class 2 felony (3 to 7 years). DUI causing death is a Class 2 felony with a mandatory prison sentence of 3 to 14 years.

Facing Felony DUI Charges? Every Minute Matters.

Felony DUI charges carry mandatory prison time. You need former prosecutors who know how to fight these cases at the highest level. Call now — free, confidential consultation. ¡Se habla español!

Call 847-520-4810 Now

Related Practice Areas

Understand the full scope of DUI law: complete Illinois DUI penalties, first-time DUI defense, breathalyzer defense strategies, and navigating the DUI court process. If drugs were involved, see our drug DUI defense page.

Felony DUI charges often accompany other serious criminal allegations. Our attorneys also defend clients facing felony criminal charges, reckless driving charges, and leaving the scene of an accident. See how we've fought for clients in our felony DUI reduced to reckless driving case result.

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