Getting a Colorado Driver License After DUI Revocation Suspension

The Secret To Getting A Colorado Driver License If You've Lost Your License in Another State

Colorado DUI Defense
Office of Jim Forslund
3780 S. Broadway
Englewood, CO 80113

www.colorado-dui.com

303-761-6067
FAX: 303-672-6815

Don't take the risk of driving on a fake license or an international driver license.
You have to start off with the Interstate Driver License Compact. And the compact basically says, for the states that are members, if you won't give them a license because of a traffic matter, we won't give them a license.
So, if somebody has a hold on your license, it keeps you from getting a license in all the other states which are members of the Compact. Which is almost all the other states. In fact, even some of the non-Compact states won't give you a license if yours has been taken away by another state.

And all traffic matters which caused you to lose your license are counted.

There is one exception to this. And that is Colorado.

You see, Colorado will give you a license if the applicable Colorado law allows you to drive here, if you are a Colorado resident. This is regardless of what your home state's law says.

In practical terms this means that if you qualify for a license under Colorado law, you must move to Colorado to become a Colorado resident and have not driven for at least a year. And you should also know that Colorado does not have a certain length of stay residency requirement. When we talk I'll give you more information about this.


How Do You Know If You Qualify?
It's simple, really. All I need to do is ask you a few questions (Colorado License Interview), and I can tell you if you qualify (But please understand, I cannot guarantee that you will get a Colorado license. I'm not the one who makes that decision.).

Except in a few cases, the longest you can lose your license here in Colorado for traffic matters is five years. There's not much I can do about that. But if your state has revoked or suspended your license for 10 years, being able to get a license back after five years is very meaningful. Particularly if you are close to the end of five years.

Depending on your record, you may be eligible for a Colorado license after even fewer years.

In addition, for a DUI conviction, if you're a Colorado resident you can get a license with an interlock after one year in many cases. (The law is less clear if you're an habitual offender (three major traffic offenses in seven years.)


Here's Exactly How it Works
First, you would apply for a license here in Colorado. Because of your conviction in your state, you will be turned down. You must have proper identification when you apply.

I then request a hearing on your behalf. It will take a few weeks to get a hearing set up. At the hearing we prove that you're a resident, showing, for example, your bank account, the fact that you have a job, your voting registration, etc. Then we present documentation on why you lost your license. The hearing office will request information from the state with the hold, but seldom gets much.

The hearing itself is not lengthy. The whole process usually only takes about a month . . . but don't hold me to that.

If we're successful here, the hearing officer will lift your denial. You'll then have to apply for a Learner's Permit (which includes a written test), go to a commercial driving school (because it takes what seems like forever to get set up for a test with the State), and take the school's test. The driving school will provide you with the car and get you tested within a couple of days.

If you pass their test, you take the certificate indicating you passed the driving test which they give you and present it to the State driver's license office to get your license.

For full information on whether or not you may qualify to get a Colorado driver's license even though yours is revoked or suspended in your home state, then call me today at 303-761-6067, and I'll give you a full rundown of what you need to know.