A DUI arrest in Shawnee, Kansas triggers two separate cases at the same time: a criminal case filed in Shawnee Municipal Court, and a civil license-suspension proceeding handled by the Kansas Department of Revenue. Kansas DOR sends a separate administrative suspension notice and you have 14 days to act. Missing that deadline is the most common avoidable mistake we see.
Shawnee Municipal Court (10th Judicial District) handles the criminal half of the case. Most DUI stops in Shawnee originate on or near K-7, Shawnee Mission Pkwy, Johnson Dr. Common arrest-night patterns trace back to Old Shawnee Town.
A DUI defense lawyer who appears regularly in Johnson County courts will know the assigned prosecutors, the typical first-offense disposition options, and whether a particular case has a real trial path or a stronger plea path. The difference between those two routes is the difference between a clean record and a decade-long mark.
A DUI in Shawnee, Kansas costs more than the fine.
A DUI conviction in Shawnee, Kansas costs far more than the fine on the citation. Kansas insurance premiums rise an average of 79% for three years after a conviction, ignition interlock devices run $70–$150 per month, SR-22 filings add several hundred dollars, and alcohol assessment and treatment can add a thousand more. The total non-attorney cost of a single conviction commonly exceeds $10,000.
Beyond money, a Kansas DUI follows you. Kansas convictions never expunge from a criminal record. CDL holders lose their license for one year on a first offense, lifetime on a second — regardless of which vehicle they were driving when arrested.
What to do in the first 14 days after a Shawnee DUI arrest.
- 01
Write down every detail of the stop and arrest in Shawnee, Kansas while it is still fresh — the road, the time, the officer's first question, what you said, and whether you were given a chance to refuse the breath test.
- 02
Calendar the 14 days from arrest to request a Kansas Department of Revenue administrative hearing deadline. Missing this single date forfeits your administrative hearing and triggers an automatic license suspension.
- 03
Pull together every document you received: the citation, the Kansas DOR notice, any bond paperwork from Shawnee Municipal Court, and a screenshot of any towing or impound receipt.
- 04
Retain a DUI defense attorney admitted to practice in Kansas who appears regularly in Shawnee Municipal Court. Familiarity with the specific prosecutors and judges in Johnson County consistently produces better outcomes than out-of-county or out-of-state representation.
- 05
Do not contact the arresting agency, the prosecutor's office, or your insurance company to discuss the case until your attorney has reviewed the evidence. Anything you say can be added to the prosecution's file.
- 06
Begin treatment or alcohol education evaluation early if recommended by your attorney. Voluntary participation before sentencing is consistently weighted favorably by Johnson County judges.
- 07
If your job requires a clean driving record — CDL, healthcare, government employment, professional license — disclose that to your attorney on the first call. The defense strategy changes when employment is at stake.
The five things that sink Shawnee DUI cases.
- §Missing the Kansas administrative-hearing deadline — drivers in Shawnee, Kansas commonly assume the criminal court date is the only deadline and lose their license automatically.
- §Speaking to the arresting officer or the prosecutor in Shawnee Municipal Court without an attorney, believing cooperation will help. It rarely does, and the statements end up in the file.
- §Hiring an attorney who does not regularly appear in Johnson County courts — particularly in suburban Kansas jurisdictions where the prosecutor and judge relationships are decisive.
- §Treating the case as a single problem instead of two — the criminal case and the administrative license case run on different timelines and must be defended in parallel.
- §Ignoring CDL implications when the arrest happened in a personal vehicle. The disqualification triggers either way.
This page is built for first-offense drivers in Shawnee, Kansas who were stopped on or near K-7 after a night out, blew above 0.08% in Kansas, and are facing both an administrative license suspension and a criminal charge in Shawnee Municipal Court. If that describes your situation, the next 14–15 days will determine whether you keep your license while the criminal case plays out.
Cases involving a serious injury accident, a fatality, a fourth-or-greater offense in Kansas, or a third-or-greater offense in Missouri move into felony jurisdiction and require a different defense posture than the framework above. Drivers arrested in Shawnee, Kansas on commercial vehicles carrying hazardous materials face additional federal-level consequences. In those scenarios, call before reading further — the timeline compresses significantly.
Real questions from Shawnee drivers.
How fast do I need to act after a DUI arrest in Shawnee, Kansas?
Kansas gives you 14 days from the arrest date to request an administrative license hearing. Miss that window and your license is automatically suspended regardless of what happens with the criminal case in Shawnee Municipal Court. Call a defense attorney within 48 hours of release.
Where is the case actually heard?
Most first-offense DUI cases originating in Shawnee, Kansas are filed in Shawnee Municipal Court. Felony cases and certain refusal cases move to the Johnson County District or Circuit Court. Aimee handles both court levels regularly.
Do I have to appear in court?
In most cases, yes — you will likely need to appear in court for a plea or hearing, though sometimes a plea can be handled remotely. What you will not have to do is wonder. Aimee's staff tracks every Shawnee Municipal Court date and lets you know well ahead of time when we expect you to be there.
How much does a DUI in Shawnee, Kansas actually cost?
Court fines and costs run $500–$1,500 for a first offense. Kansas insurance premiums increase an average of 79% for three years. Ignition interlock devices run $70–$150 per month, with SR-22 filings, alcohol assessment, and license reinstatement adding several hundred more.
What if I refused the breath test?
Refusal in Kansas triggers a separate administrative license suspension — one year in Kansas, similar consequences in Missouri — independent of the criminal case. It also denies the prosecutor the cleanest piece of evidence, which can strengthen the defense. The trade-off has to be evaluated case by case.
What if I have a CDL?
A first DUI in any vehicle, personal or commercial, disqualifies a CDL for one year. A second is lifetime. If you drive for a living anywhere in Johnson County or the broader Kansas City metro, the case is not just a license issue — it is your career, and we treat it that way.