North Carolina General Statutes
Article 2 - Uniform Driver's License Act.
§ 20-20.1 - Limited driving privilege for certain revocations.

20-20.1. Limited driving privilege for certain revocations.
(a) Definitions. - The following definitions apply in this section:
(1) Limited driving privilege. - A judgment issued by a court authorizing a person with a revoked drivers license to drive under specified terms and conditions.
(2) Nonstandard working hours. - Anytime other than 6:00 A.M. until 8:00 P.M. on Monday through Friday.
(3) Standard working hours. - Anytime from 6:00 A.M. until 8:00 P.M. on Monday through Friday.
(4) Underlying offense. - The offense for which a person's drivers license was revoked when the person was charged under G.S. 20-28(a), driving with a revoked license, or under G.S. 20-28.1, committing a motor vehicle moving offense while driving with a revoked license.
(b) Eligibility. - A person is eligible to apply for a limited driving privilege under this section if all of the following conditions apply:
(1) The person's license is currently revoked under G.S. 20-28(a) or G.S. 20-28.1.
(2) The person has complied with the revocation for the period required in subsection (c) of this section immediately preceding the date the person files a petition for a limited driving privilege under this section.
(3) The person's underlying offense is not an offense involving impaired driving and, if the person's license is revoked under G.S. 20-28.1 for committing a motor vehicle moving offense while driving with a revoked license, the moving offense is not an offense involving impaired driving.
(4) The revocation period for the underlying offense has expired.
(5) The revocation under G.S. 20-28(a) or G.S. 20-28.1 is the only revocation in effect.
(6) The person is not eligible to receive a limited driving privilege under any other law.
(7) The person has not held a limited driving privilege issued under this section at anytime during the three years prior to the date the person files the current petition.
(8) The person has no pending charges for any motor vehicle offense in this or in any other state and has no unpaid motor vehicle fines or penalties in this or in any other state.
(9) The person's drivers license issued by another state has not been revoked by that state.
(10) G.S. 20-9(e) or G.S. 20-9(f) does not prohibit the Division from issuing the person a license.
(c) Compliance Period. - The following table sets out the period during which a person must comply with a revocation under G.S. 20-28(a) or G.S. 20-28.1 to be eligible for a limited driving privilege under this section:
(d) Petition. - A person may apply for a limited driving privilege under this section by filing a petition. A petition filed under this section is separate from the action that resulted in the initial revocation and is a civil action. A petition must be filed in district court in the county of the person's residence as reflected by the Division's records or, if the Division's records are inaccurate, in the county of the person's actual residence. A person must attach to a petition a copy of the person's motor vehicle record. A petition must include a sworn statement that the person filing the petition is eligible for a limited driving privilege under this section.
A court, for good cause shown, may issue a limited driving privilege to an eligible person in accordance with this section. The costs required under G.S. 7A-305(a) and G.S. 20-20.2 apply to a petition filed under this section. The clerk of court for the court that issues a limited driving privilege under this section must send a copy of the limited driving privilege to the Division.
(e) Scope of Privilege. - A limited driving privilege restricts the person to essential driving related to one or more of the purposes listed in this subsection. Any driving that is not related to the purposes authorized in this subsection is unlawful even though done at times and upon routes that may be authorized by the privilege. Except as otherwise provided, all driving must be for a purpose and done within the restrictions specified in the privilege.
The permissible purposes for a limited driving privilege are:
(1) Travel to and from the person's place of employment and in the course of employment.
(2) Travel necessary for maintenance of the person's household.
(3) Travel to provide emergency medical care for the person or for an immediate family member of the person who resides in the same household with the person. Driving related to emergency medical care is authorized at anytime and without restriction as to routes.
(f) Employment Driving in Standard Working Hours. - The court may authorize driving for employment-related purposes during standard working hours without specifying times and routes for the driving. If the person is required to drive for essential employment-related purposes only during standard working hours, the limited driving privilege must prohibit driving during nonstandard working hours unless the driving is for emergency medical care or for authorized household maintenance. The limited driving privilege must state the name and address of the person's employer and may, in the discretion of the court, include other information and restrictions applicable to employment-related driving.
(g) Employment Driving in Nonstandard Working Hours. - If a person is required to drive during nonstandard working hours for an essential employment-related purpose and the person provides documentation of that fact to the court, the court may authorize the person to drive for that purpose during those hours. If the person is self-employed, the documentation must be attached to or made a part of the limited driving privilege. If the person is employed by another, the limited driving privilege must state the name and address of the person's employer and may, in the discretion of the court, include other information and restrictions applicable to employment-related driving. If the court determines that it is necessary for the person to drive during nonstandard working hours for an employment-related purpose, the court may authorize the person to drive subject to these limitations:
(1) If the person is required to drive to and from a specific place of employment at regular times, the limited driving privilege must specify the general times and routes by which the person may drive to and from work and must restrict driving to those times and routes.
(2) If the person is required to drive to and from work at a specific place but is unable to specify the times during which the driving will occur, the limited driving privilege must specify the general routes by which the person may drive to and from work and must restrict driving to those general routes.
(3) If the person is required to drive to and from work at regular times but is unable to specify the places at which work is to be performed, the limited driving privilege must specify the general times and geographic boundaries within which the person may drive and must restrict driving to those times and boundaries.
(4) If the person can specify neither the times nor places in which the person will be driving to and from work, the limited driving privilege must specify the geographic boundaries within which the person may drive and must restrict driving to those boundaries.
(h) Household Maintenance. - A limited driving privilege may allow driving for maintenance of the household only during standard working hours. The court, at its discretion, may impose additional restrictions on driving for the maintenance of the household.
(i) Restrictions. - A limited driving privilege that is not authorized by this section or that does not contain the restrictions required by law is invalid. A limited driving privilege issued under this section is subject to the following conditions:
(1) Financial responsibility. - A person applying for a limited driving privilege under this section must provide the court proof of financial responsibility acceptable under G.S. 20-16.1(g) and must maintain the financial responsibility during the period of the limited driving privilege.
(2) Alcohol restrictions. - A person who received a limited driving privilege under this section may not consume alcohol while driving or drive at anytime while the person has remaining in the person's body any alcohol or controlled substance previously consumed, unless the controlled substance was lawfully obtained and taken in therapeutically appropriate amounts.
(3) Others. - The court may impose any other reasonable restrictions or conditions necessary to achieve the purposes of this section.
(j) Term and Reinstatement. - The term of a limited driving privilege issued under this section is the shorter of one year or the length of time remaining in the revocation period imposed under G.S. 20-28(a) or G.S. 20-28.1. When the term of the limited driving privilege expires, the Division must reinstate the person's license if the person meets all of the conditions listed in this subsection. The Division may impose restrictions or conditions on the new license in accordance with G.S. 20-7(e). The conditions are:
(1) Payment of the restoration fee as required under G.S. 20-7(i1).
(2) Providing proof of financial responsibility as required under G.S. 20-7(c1).
(3) Providing the proof required for reinstatement of a license under G.S. 20-28(c1).
(k) Modification. - A court may modify or revoke a person's limited driving privilege issued under this section upon a showing that the circumstances have changed sufficiently to justify modification or revocation. If the judge who issued the privilege is not presiding in the court in which the privilege was issued, a presiding judge in that court may modify or revoke the privilege. The judge must indicate in the order of modification or revocation the reasons for the order or make specific findings indicating the reason for the order and enter those findings in the record of the case. When a court issues an order of modification or revocation, the clerk of court must send a copy of the order to the Division.
(l) Effect of Violation. - A violation of a limited driving privilege issued under this section constitutes the offense of driving while license revoked under G.S. 20-28. When a person is charged with operating a motor vehicle in violation of the limited driving privilege, the limited driving privilege is suspended pending the final disposition of the charge. (2007-293, s. 1; 2007-323, s. 30.11(d); 2007-345, s. 9.1(c); 2008-118, s. 2.9(b).)

Structure North Carolina General Statutes

North Carolina General Statutes

Chapter 20 - Motor Vehicles

Article 2 - Uniform Driver's License Act.

§ 20-5 - Title of Article.

§ 20-7 - Issuance and renewal of drivers licenses.

§ 20-7.1 - Notice of change of address or name.

§ 20-7.3 - Availability of organ, eye, and tissue donor cards at motor vehicle offices.

§ 20-7.4 - License to Give Trust Fund established.

§ 20-7.5 - License to Give Trust Fund Commission established.

§ 20-7.6 - Powers and duties of the License to Give Trust Fund Commission.

§ 20-8 - Persons exempt from license.

§ 20-9 - What persons shall not be licensed.

§ 20-9.1 - Physicians, psychologists, and other medical providers providing medical information on drivers with physical or mental disabilities or diseases.

§ 20-9.2 - Selective service system registration requirements.

§ 20-9.3 - Notification of requirements for sex offender registration.

§ 20-10 - Age limits for drivers of public passenger-carrying vehicles.

§ 20-10.1 - Mopeds.

§ 20-11 - Issuance of limited learner's permit and provisional drivers license to person who is less than 18 years old.

§ 20-12.1 - Impaired supervision or instruction.

§ 20-13 - Suspension of license of provisional licensee.

§ 20-13.2 - Grounds for revoking provisional license.

§ 20-13.3 - Immediate civil license revocation for provisional licensees charged with certain offenses.

§ 20-14 - Duplicate licenses.

§ 20-15 - Authority of Division to cancel license or endorsement.

§ 20-15.1 - Revocations when licensing privileges forfeited.

§ 20-16 - Authority of Division to suspend license.

§ 20-16.01 - Double penalties for offenses committed while operating a commercial motor vehicle.

§ 20-16.1 - Mandatory suspension of driver's license upon conviction of excessive speeding; limited driving permits for first offenders.

§ 20-16.2 - Implied consent to chemical analysis; mandatory revocation of license in event of refusal; right of driver to request analysis.

§ 20-16.3 - Alcohol screening tests required of certain drivers; approval of test devices and manner of use by Department of Health and Human Services; use of test results or refusal.

§ 20-16.3A - Checking stations and roadblocks.

§ 20-16.5 - Immediate civil license revocation for certain persons charged with implied-consent offenses.

§ 20-17 - Mandatory revocation of license by Division.

§ 20-17.1 - Revocation of license of mental incompetents, alcoholics and habitual users of narcotic drugs.

§ 20-17.1A - Restoration of license for person adjudicated to be restored to competency.

§ 20-17.3 - Revocation for underage purchasers of alcohol.

§ 20-17.4 - Disqualification to drive a commercial motor vehicle.

§ 20-17.5 - Effect of disqualification.

§ 20-17.6 - Restoration of a license after a conviction of driving while impaired or driving while less than 21 years old after consuming alcohol or drugs.

§ 20-17.7 - Commercial motor vehicle out-of-service fines authorized.

§ 20-17.8 - Restoration of a license after certain driving while impaired convictions; ignition interlock.

§ 20-17.8A - Tampering with ignition interlock systems.

§ 20-17.9 - Revocation of commercial drivers license with a P or S endorsement upon conviction of certain offenses.

§ 20-18 - Conviction of offenses described in § 1 not ground for suspension or revocation.

§ 20-19 - Period of suspension or revocation; conditions of restoration[Effective until June 1, 2022]

§ 20-20.1 - Limited driving privilege for certain revocations.

§ 20-20.2 - Processing fee for limited driving privilege.

§ 20-21 - No operation under foreign license during suspension or revocation in this State.

§ 20-22 - Suspending privileges of nonresidents and reporting convictions.

§ 20-23 - Revoking resident's license upon conviction in another state.

§ 20-23.1 - Suspending or revoking operating privilege of person not holding license.

§ 20-23.2 - Suspension of license for conviction of offense involving impaired driving in federal court.

§ 20-24 - When court or child support enforcement agency to forward license to Division and report convictions, child support delinquencies, and prayers for judgment continued.

§ 20-24.1 - Revocation for failure to appear or pay fine, penalty or costs for motor vehicle offenses.

§ 20-24.2 - Court to report failure to appear or pay fine, penalty or costs.

§ 20-25 - Right of appeal to court.

§ 20-26 - Records; copies furnished; charge.

§ 20-27 - Availability of records.

§ 20-27.1 - Unlawful for sex offender to drive commercial passenger vehicle or school bus without appropriate commercial license or while disqualified.

§ 20-28 - (Effective until January 1, 2023) Unlawful to drive while license revoked, after notification, or while disqualified.

§ 20-28.1 - Conviction of moving offense committed while driving during period of suspension or revocation of license.

§ 20-28.2 - Forfeiture of motor vehicle for impaired driving after impaired driving license revocation; forfeiture for felony speeding to elude arrest.

§ 20-28.3 - Seizure, impoundment, forfeiture of motor vehicles for offenses involving impaired driving while license revoked or without license and insurance, and for felony speeding to elude arrest.

§ 20-28.4 - Release of impounded motor vehicles by judge.

§ 20-28.5 - Forfeiture of impounded motor vehicle or funds.

§ 20-28.7 - Responsibility of Division of Motor Vehicles.

§ 20-28.8 - Reports to the Division.

§ 20-28.9 - Authority for the State Surplus Property Agency to administer a statewide or regional towing, storage, and sales program for vehicles forfeited.

§ 20-29 - Surrender of license.

§ 20-29.1 - Commissioner may require reexamination; issuance of limited or restricted licenses.

§ 20-30 - (Effective until July 1, 2023) Violations of license, learner's permit, or special identification card provisions.

§ 20-31 - Making false affidavits perjury.

§ 20-32 - Unlawful to permit unlicensed minor to drive motor vehicle.

§ 20-34 - Unlawful to permit violations of this Article.

§ 20-34.1 - Violations for wrongful issuance of a drivers license or a special identification card.

§ 20-35 - Penalties for violating Article; defense to driving without a license.

§ 20-36 - Ten-year-old convictions not considered.

§ 20-37 - Limitations on issuance of licenses.

§ 20-37.01 - Drivers License Technology Fund.

§ 20-37.02 - Verification of drivers license information.