4 Steps to Finding Compliant DUI Classes Near Me

dui classes near me

Key Takeaways

  • Pull your court paperwork first to identify your charge, deadlines, diversion status, and court contact, because those details determine which class level and provider can legally serve you 3.
  • Complete a certified DUII assessment before enrolling in any class, since the evaluator's recommendation decides the level of education or treatment the court will actually accept 6.
  • Verify your provider appears on Oregon's OHA Substance Use Disorders Services Directory as Division-approved, or Wyoming's BHD provider search under the Substance Level 0.5 DUI Education filter 2, 3.
  • Finish every completion condition, including Oregon's 90-day continuous abstinence standard, and confirm the provider sends documentation directly to your court, probation officer, or diversion coordinator 1.

What "compliant" actually means when a court orders a DUI class

If you're reading this the week after a DUII citation, your inbox is probably a mess of court dates, insurance calls, and Google results promising a fast "DUI class near me." Take a breath. The first thing to know is that the word compliant is doing a lot of work in your court paperwork, and it doesn't mean what most search results imply.

A compliant class isn't just any class about drinking and driving. It's a specific program, at a specific level, delivered by a provider your state has certified to serve court-ordered DUII participants. In Oregon, that means a provider listed in the Oregon Health Authority's Substance Use Disorders Services Directory as Division-approved for DUII services 2. In Wyoming, it means a provider certified by the Behavioral Health Division, findable through the state's provider search with the "Substance Level 0.5 DUI Education" filter turned on 3. A class outside those systems can be well-run, well-intentioned, and completely useless to your case.

Compliance also has a shape courts expect. National guidance from NHTSA lays it out plainly: people convicted of an impaired-driving offense should be assessed to determine whether they have an alcohol or drug problem, then placed into education, treatment, or monitoring that matches what the assessment found 6. That's why an assessment comes before a class, not after. The class level is a consequence of what the assessment recommends.

There's one more piece that surprises people, especially in Oregon: completion isn't just about attendance. Oregon's DUII provider standards expect participants to demonstrate a minimum of 90 days of continuous abstinence before completing a program 1. That requirement lives inside the definition of compliant, even when it isn't in the flier for the class.

Knowing what compliant means changes what you're looking for. You're not shopping for a class. You're following a state-defined path, and the next four steps show you exactly how to walk it.

Step 1: Get your court paperwork before you Google anything

Before you type "DUI classes near me" into your phone, pull out every piece of paper the court gave you. Sit down with it. This is the least fun part of the process, and it's also the part that saves you the most money and time.

You're looking for a few specific things: the exact charge (in Oregon, that's usually a citation under ORS 813.010) 10, whether you've been offered diversion or you're on a probation track 11, any deadlines already printed on the paperwork, and the name of the court and probation officer or diversion coordinator handling your case. If you can't find these, call the court clerk. They deal with this call every day and won't be surprised by it.

Why this comes before searching for a class: your court order determines the level of education or treatment you need, and the level determines which providers can legally serve you. In Wyoming, the state Department of Health is explicit that the court decides what level of education or treatment is required, and enrolling before that decision is made means guessing 3. In Oregon, the same logic runs through the DUII services system — providers are matched to what your case actually requires, not to what looks convenient on a map 2.

Write down four things on a single page: your charge, your deadlines, your court contact, and whether diversion is on the table. Keep that page with you when you make calls. You'll refer to it more than you expect.

One more piece of grace: if the paperwork feels overwhelming, that's normal. Nobody reads court documents fluently the first time. Ask the clerk to walk you through anything unclear before you spend a dollar on a class.

Step 2: Complete a certified DUII assessment first

Here's where a lot of people lose weeks they didn't have to lose: they sign up for a class before they've had an assessment, and the class doesn't count toward what the court actually ordered. The assessment isn't a hoop. It's the mechanism that decides which class, at which level, with which provider, meets your specific requirement.

A DUII assessment is a structured clinical interview with a certified evaluator. You'll answer questions about your drinking or drug use history, the incident itself, any prior charges, medical and mental health context, and family and social factors. The evaluator uses standardized tools, then writes a recommendation: education only, a specific level of outpatient treatment, or something more intensive if the picture warrants it. NHTSA's uniform guidelines for state impaired-driving programs are direct about this sequence — people convicted of an impaired-driving offense should be assessed to determine whether they have an alcohol or drug problem before placement decisions are made 6.

Why the state cares so much about assessment-before-class: individualized placement actually works better than one-size-fits-all education. NHTSA's review of alcohol problem assessment and treatment found that, on average, treatment reduced DWI recidivism and alcohol-related crashes by roughly 7% to 9% 5. This figure reflects treatment overall rather than education alone, highlighting that the matching step—assessment feeding placement—is the part the research supports. Skipping it puts you in a class the court may not accept and that may not fit what you actually need.

A few practical notes on the assessment itself. Honesty helps you. Evaluators are trained to notice minimization, and a rushed or defensive assessment can push you toward a higher level of care than you'd otherwise need. Bring your court paperwork, a photo ID, your driving record if you have it, and any prior treatment history. Ask up front whether the evaluator is certified in your state and whether they'll send the written assessment directly to your court, probation officer, or diversion coordinator — that documentation is the piece the court files, not the fact that you showed up.

One more thing worth naming plainly: an assessment can feel exposing. You're sitting with a stranger, telling them about the worst night you've had in a long time. That's uncomfortable, and it doesn't mean you're being judged. The evaluator's job is to match you accurately, not to grade you. Give yourself credit for showing up to the appointment. That's the step that moves everything else forward.

Step 3: Verify the provider is on your state's approved list

You have your paperwork. You've completed your assessment. Now you match the assessment recommendation to a provider your state has actually certified to serve DUII participants — not one that just runs a class with a similar name. This step is where a Google map result becomes a compliant enrollment, or doesn't.

Both Oregon and Wyoming publish official directories for exactly this purpose. Neither state hides them, but neither state advertises them either. You have to know they exist and use them directly. Here's how to do that in each state.

Finding a Division-approved provider in Oregon

In Oregon, the tool you want is the Substance Use Disorders Services Directory maintained by the Oregon Health Authority. OHA lists Division-approved DUII services providers there, which is the specific status a court, probation officer, or diversion coordinator needs to see 2. If a provider isn't in that directory under DUII services, they're not the right fit for a court-ordered class, no matter how good their reviews are.

When you search, look for two things on the provider's listing: DUII services status, and the level of service that matches what your assessment recommended. If your assessment placed you in education only, you need a provider certified for that. If it moved you into outpatient treatment, the provider must be approved to deliver that level under Oregon's DUII standards 1.

OHA also runs a DUII Information Line for exactly the moments when the directory feels confusing 2. Call it. Ask them to confirm that a specific provider in Portland, Central Oregon, or wherever you live is currently Division-approved for your assigned level. Getting that confirmation in writing — an email, a screenshot of the directory listing — saves you a fight later if anyone questions your enrollment.

Finding a BHD-certified provider in Wyoming

Wyoming's system runs through the Behavioral Health Division. The state Department of Health is direct about it: the place you go must be certified by the BHD, and you find those providers through the state's provider search tool 3.

The trick most people miss is the filter. When you open the search, check the "Substance Level 0.5 DUI (Driving Under Influence) Education" service-offered drop-down before you look at results 3. Without that filter, you'll see behavioral health providers who don't offer the specific DUI education service the court assigned you to. With it, the list narrows to programs that can actually satisfy your requirement.

Wyoming's guidance follows a clear three-step order: get your court assignment, search for a BHD-certified provider that offers the level you were assigned, then enroll 3. If you're in a rural part of the state and the nearest certified provider is a drive, ask them about scheduling options before you rule them out. A longer drive to a compliant provider costs less than a nearby class the court won't accept.

Oregon vs. Wyoming compliance paths at a glance

If you're helping someone in the other state, or you live near a border, the two systems are close cousins with different labels. Oregon routes you through the OHA Substance Use Disorders Services Directory to find Division-approved DUII providers, and completion carries a 90-day continuous abstinence standard 1, 2. Wyoming routes you through the BHD provider search with the "Substance Level 0.5 DUI Education" filter, following a court-assignment-then-enroll sequence 3. Same idea, different doors.

Side-by-side comparison of Oregon and Wyoming provider verification systems, directly supporting the section's explicit comparison of the two state paths

Step 4: Enroll, complete the hours, and meet every completion condition

Enrollment is the moment the plan becomes real. You've got your paperwork, your assessment recommendation, and a state-approved provider that matches your assigned level. Now the work is finishing what you started — and finishing it in a way the court will actually accept.

Start by confirming three things in writing before your first session: the level of service you're enrolled in (it should match your assessment recommendation exactly), how the provider will document your completion, and how that documentation reaches your court, probation officer, or diversion coordinator. In Oregon, your provider should be listed in the OHA Substance Use Disorders Services Directory as Division-approved for DUII services 2. In Wyoming, they should show up in the BHD provider search under the "Substance Level 0.5 DUI Education" filter 3. Ask the provider to send you a copy of their intake and enrollment confirmation. Keep it.

Then show up. Every session, on time. Missed sessions have a way of turning into rescheduled sessions, which turn into missed deadlines. If life genuinely gets in the way — a shift change, a sick kid, a car problem — call the provider the same day and ask what the makeup policy is. Programs are usually more flexible about a heads-up than a no-show.

Here's the completion piece that trips people up in Oregon: attendance alone doesn't finish the program. State DUII standards expect participants to demonstrate a minimum of 90 days of continuous abstinence before completion 1. That's not a suggestion the provider can waive to be nice. If you're in an Oregon program, plan your abstinence timeline backwards from your projected completion date, and be honest with your counselor if you slip. A reset is manageable. A slip you hid until the end is what delays paperwork.

Before you consider yourself finished, run this checklist against your program:

  • The provider is currently listed in the Oregon OHA Substance Use Disorders Services Directory or the Wyoming BHD provider search under the correct DUI service level 2, 3.
  • The level you completed matches the level your court order and assessment specified.
  • You have written completion documentation with your name, dates of service, hours completed, and the provider's certification identifier.
  • The provider is sending that documentation directly to your court, probation officer, or diversion coordinator — not handing it to you and calling it done.
  • If you're in Oregon, your 90-day continuous abstinence period is documented and meets the standard 1.
  • If you're in Wyoming, your provider's BHD certification for the assigned service level is current at the time of completion 3.

Finally, keep your own copy of everything. Completion letters, receipts, attendance logs, the assessment report. Court files get lost. Probation officers change. Your copy is what protects you if anyone questions whether you finished. Save it somewhere you can find it a year from now, because you may need it for license reinstatement or a background question long after the case closes.

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Red flags that a class won't count

By the time you're comparing options, your gut will usually tell you when something is off. Trust it, and check for these specific signs before you pay a deposit or sit through a first session.

The provider can't tell you their state certification status in plain language. A compliant Oregon program will say, without hedging, that they're Division-approved for DUII services and listed in the OHA Substance Use Disorders Services Directory 2. A compliant Wyoming program will say they're BHD-certified for the specific service level you were assigned 3. Vague answers about "working with the courts" or "being state-recognized" aren't the same thing.

They'll enroll you without seeing your assessment. If a program is happy to place you at whatever level you request, they aren't matching you to what your court order requires. The state guidance is clear that the court decides the level, and enrollment follows the assessment recommendation 3, 6.

They promise a specific court outcome. No provider can guarantee dismissal, license reinstatement, or a particular sentence. That's the court's decision, tied to the diversion agreement or probation terms you're already working under 11.

Completion documentation is vague. Ask exactly what you'll receive at the end and who it goes to. "A certificate" isn't enough. You need dated, signed documentation with your name, hours, service level, and provider certification identifier, sent directly to the court, probation officer, or diversion coordinator.

Online-only classes with no assessment link. Convenience is real, but a class that skips assessment and isn't tied to your state's certified provider system is a class the court likely won't accept.

Any one of these is enough reason to keep looking.

How diversion timelines change the math in Oregon

If you're in Oregon and diversion is on the table, the clock is louder than it looks. You have 30 days from your first court appearance to file a diversion petition, and once you're in diversion, you have a fixed window — usually a year — to finish every condition attached to it 11. That includes your assessment, your DUII education or treatment, and any monitoring the court adds.

Here's how the math actually works. Say you file your petition on day 30. You still need to complete an assessment before you can enroll in the right level of class. If the assessment recommends outpatient treatment rather than education, you're now scheduling weekly sessions with a Division-approved provider 2. Then there's Oregon's 90-day continuous abstinence standard before completion 1. Add those pieces up and a year gets tight fast — especially if you delay the assessment by a month or pick a provider who turns out not to be on the OHA directory.

Two moves protect your timeline. Schedule your assessment the same week you file your petition, not after. And confirm your provider's Division-approved status before your first session, so you're not restarting the clock on hours that don't count.

If you complete every condition inside the window, the diversion agreement lets you file a motion to dismiss the DUII charge 11. Miss the window, and the plea you entered to get into diversion becomes the plea the court acts on. That's the reason the sequence matters more than the search.

When the assessment recommends treatment, not just education

Sometimes the assessment comes back and it's not the answer you were hoping for. Instead of a short education class, the evaluator recommends outpatient treatment — weekly groups, individual counseling, maybe a longer timeline. That moment can feel like the ground shifted. It didn't. It means the assessment did its job.

The distinction between DUII education and treatment isn't punishment. Education is designed for people whose use pattern looks situational. Treatment is designed for people whose assessment surfaced something more persistent, and it works because it addresses what's actually going on. SAMHSA's guidance on substance use disorder treatment describes a whole-person approach — behavioral therapies, and where appropriate, medication combined with counseling — rather than a single generic class 13. Your provider will still need to be Division-approved in Oregon 2 or BHD-certified in Wyoming 3 to satisfy the court, but the level of care will be different, and the completion timeline usually longer.

Two things to hold at once. Yes, this is harder than what you signed up for mentally. And yes, it's also the version of this process most likely to keep you from being back in a courtroom for the same reason. If treatment is what the assessment found, treatment is the compliant path. Ask your provider how the treatment plan maps to your court order, and keep going.

A steady next step

If you've read this far, you already know more than most people do when they start. You know that compliance isn't a mystery — it's a sequence. Paperwork, assessment, approved provider, completion. That's the whole map.

Pick one thing to do today. Not the whole list. Just the next honest step. If you haven't opened your court paperwork, open it. If you have your paperwork but no assessment scheduled, call to schedule one. If you're mid-program in Oregon, mark your 90-day abstinence date on a calendar you actually look at 1.

Whatever you're feeling right now — embarrassed, tired, scared about your license, worried about your family — none of that disqualifies you from finishing this well. People complete this process every week in Portland, Central Oregon, and across Wyoming. You can be one of them. If you're looking for a certified DUII assessment in the Portland area, Oregon Trail Recovery is one place to start that conversation.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if a DUI class near me will actually count with the court?

Two checks settle it. First, the provider appears on your state's official list — the Oregon Health Authority's Substance Use Disorders Services Directory as a Division-approved DUII provider 2, or Wyoming's BHD provider search under the "Substance Level 0.5 DUI Education" filter 3. Second, the level of the class matches what your assessment recommended and what your court order specifies. If either piece is missing, the hours may not count.

Do I need a DUII assessment before I sign up for a class?

Yes, in almost every case. National guidance from NHTSA is direct: people convicted of an impaired-driving offense should be assessed before placement decisions are made 6. The assessment decides the level — education, outpatient treatment, or something more intensive — and the level decides which providers can serve you. Enrolling first and assessing later is the fastest way to pay for hours the court won't accept.

What is Oregon's 90-day continuous abstinence requirement, and when does it apply?

Oregon's DUII provider standards expect participants to demonstrate a minimum of 90 days of continuous abstinence before completing a program 1. It applies to anyone finishing a Division-approved DUII program in Oregon, whether you're in education or treatment. Attendance alone doesn't close out your file. Plan the 90-day window backwards from your projected completion date, and be honest with your counselor if something interrupts it — a reset is workable, a hidden slip is not.

How do I find a BHD-certified DUI education provider in Wyoming?

Use the Wyoming Department of Health's provider search tool. Before you read results, check the "Substance Level 0.5 DUI (Driving Under Influence) Education" service-offered drop-down filter 3. Without that filter, you'll see behavioral health providers who don't deliver the specific service your court assigned. The state's three-step order matters: get your court assignment first, search for a BHD-certified provider at the assigned level, then enroll 3. In rural areas, a longer drive to a certified provider beats a nearby class the court rejects.

What happens if my assessment recommends treatment instead of just an education class?

It means the evaluator saw a pattern that education alone won't address. Treatment usually involves weekly groups, individual counseling, and a longer timeline, following a whole-person approach that may combine behavioral therapies with medication when appropriate 13. Your provider still needs to be Division-approved in Oregon 2 or BHD-certified in Wyoming 3 to satisfy the court. Ask how the treatment plan maps to your court order in writing, and keep going. This is the compliant path.

How does the 30-day diversion petition window in Oregon affect when I should enroll?

You have 30 days from your first court appearance to file a diversion petition, and once in diversion, a fixed window — usually a year — to finish every condition, including assessment, education or treatment, and any monitoring 11. Schedule your assessment the same week you file, not after. Confirm your provider is Division-approved before your first session 2. Completing every condition inside the window lets you file a motion to dismiss the DUII charge 11.

References

  1. DUII Services Providers - Oregon Health Authority. https://www.oregon.gov/oha/hsd/amh-duii/pages/dsp.aspx
  2. DUII Services - Oregon Health Authority. https://www.oregon.gov/oha/hsd/amh-duii/pages/services.aspx
  3. DUI Services - Wyoming Department of Health. https://health.wyo.gov/behavioralhealth/mhsa/dui-services/
  4. Countermeasures That Work - NHTSA Web Overview. https://www.nhtsa.gov/book/countermeasures/countermeasures-that-work
  5. Alcohol Problem Assessment and Treatment | NHTSA. https://www.nhtsa.gov/book/countermeasures-that-work/alcohol-impaired-driving/countermeasures/other-strategies-behavior
  6. Impaired Driving | NHTSA. https://www.nhtsa.gov/uniform-guidelines-state-highway-safety-programs/impaired-driving
  7. STATE OF OREGON - Impaired Driving Program Assessment. https://www.oregon.gov/odot/Safety/Documents/Oregon_Impaired_Driving_Program_Assessment.pdf
  8. Substance Abuse Professionals (SAP) - Department of Transportation. https://www.transportation.gov/odapc/sap
  9. Court – DUI Sentencing Grid - Washington Courts. https://www.courts.wa.gov/newsinfo/content/duigrid/DUI%20Sentencing%20Grid_201806.pdf
  10. ORS 813.010 - Oregon Revised Statutes. https://www.oregonlegislature.gov/bills_laws/ors/ors813.html
  11. DUII Diversion : Programs & Services - Oregon Judicial Department. https://www.courts.oregon.gov/courts/clatsop/programs-services/pages/duii-diversion.aspx
  12. Countermeasures That Work: A Highway Safety Countermeasure Guide for State Highway Safety Offices (11th Edition, 2023). https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov/files/2023-12/countermeasures-that-work-11th-2023-tag_0.pdf
  13. Treatment Options for Substance Use Disorder - SAMHSA. https://www.samhsa.gov/substance-use/treatment/options
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