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State blood-alcohol limits
The amount of alcohol in a person's body is measured by the weight of
the alcohol in a certain volume of blood. This is called the blood
alcohol concentration, or "BAC." Because the volume of blood
varies with the size of a person, BAC establishes an objective measure
to determine levels of impairment.
The measurement is based on grams per deciliter (g/dl), and in most
states a person is considered legally intoxicated if his or her BAC is
.08 g/dl or greater; that is, alcohol makes up one-tenth of one percent
of the person's blood.
|
State
|
BAC per se level
|
| Alabama |
.08
|
| Alaska |
.08
|
| Arizona |
.08
|
| Arkansas |
.08
|
| California |
.08
|
| Colorado |
.08
|
| Connecticut |
.08
|
| Delaware |
.08
|
| District of Columbia |
.08
|
| Florida |
.08
|
| Georgia |
.08
|
| Hawaii |
.08
|
| Idaho |
.08
|
| Illinois |
.08
|
| Indiana |
.08
|
| Iowa |
.08
|
| Kansas |
.08
|
| Kentucky |
.08
|
| Louisiana |
.08
|
| Maine |
.08
|
| Maryland |
.08
|
| Massachusetts |
-
|
| Michigan |
.08
|
| Minnesota |
.08
|
| Mississippi |
.08
|
| Missouri |
.08
|
| Montana |
.08
|
| Nebraska |
.08
|
| Nevada |
.08
|
| New Hampshire |
.08
|
| New Jersey |
.08
|
| New Mexico |
.08
|
| New York |
.08
|
| North Carolina |
.08
|
| North Dakota |
.08
|
| Ohio |
.08
|
| Oklahoma |
.08
|
| Oregon |
.08
|
| Pennsylvania |
.08
|
| Rhode Island |
.08
|
| South Carolina |
.08
|
| South Dakota |
.08
|
| Tennessee |
.08
|
| Texas |
.08
|
| Utah |
.08
|
| Vermont |
.08
|
| Virginia |
.08
|
| Washington |
.08
|
| West Virginia |
.08
|
| Wisconsin |
.08
|
| Wyoming |
.08
|
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