What is the per se blood alcohol concentration limit for an adult driver of a passenger vehicle in Vermont?

VT Alcohol and Driving

What is the per se blood alcohol concentration limit for an adult driver of a passenger vehicle in Vermont?

  1. 0.08 percent BAC ✓
  2. 0.10 percent BAC
  3. 0.04 percent BAC
  4. There is no specific BAC limit; impairment is judged case by case
Correct answer: A. 0.08 percent BAC

The answer explained

A per se limit means that at or above this BAC you are presumed legally impaired regardless of whether you appear to drive normally. Vermont enforces a limit of 0.08 percent for adult drivers of passenger vehicles, 0.02 percent for drivers under 21, and 0.04 percent for commercial drivers. Implied consent applies. By using Vermont roads you consent to chemical testing, and refusing the test triggers automatic license suspension separate from any criminal charge.

Why this rule exists

Alcohol slows reaction time, narrows peripheral vision, and degrades judgment about speed and distance. The per se number gives prosecutors a clear bright line so cases do not depend on subjective field observations alone.

The most common mistake

Drinkers rely on rules of thumb such as one drink per hour. Body weight, food, hydration, sex, and alcohol type all change absorption. The only reliable safe number is zero before driving.

Vermont specific note

Vermont tests on moose collision avoidance and unpaved town highway etiquette. For this question in particular, the Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles aligns with the standard interpretation explained above. Always verify against the most recent Vermont driver handbook before relying on these details for the live exam.

Study tip

Learn three numbers: 0.08 (or 0.05 in Utah) standard adult, 0.04 commercial, 0.02 or lower for under 21. Vermont uses 0.08 for adult, 0.02 for under 21.

Related questions for Vermont

Take the full Vermont permit practice test →