Drunk driving shatters lives. You may think the driver is the only one at fault. Yet in many cases, the bar or restaurant that kept serving drinks also shares the blame. This truth can shock you after a crash. You may sit with medical bills, lost work, and grief, and wonder who should pay. State laws sometimes hold businesses responsible when they serve someone who is clearly drunk, and that person later causes a DUI crash. These laws exist to protect you, your family, and your community. They also push bars and restaurants to act with care when they pour another drink. Hart Law works with people who face this hard path. You deserve clear answers about when a business can be held liable, what proof you need, and what steps you can take next.
What Dram Shop Laws Are And Why They Matter
Many states use “dram shop” laws. These laws allow you to hold a bar, restaurant, or club responsible when it recklessly serves alcohol and a drunk driver hurts you.
In simple terms, a business may be liable if it:
- Serves a person who is clearly drunk
- Serves a person under the legal drinking age
- Knows the person plans to drive and still keeps serving
Every state writes its own rules. Some states give you a clear path to sue. Other states limit or block claims against bars and restaurants. You need to know what your state allows before you act.
How State Laws Differ
Lawmakers do not agree on how much blame a business should carry. You can see the range in three common types of laws.
| Type of State Law | When A Business May Be Liable | What This Means For You |
|---|---|---|
| Strong dram shop law | Business serves a clearly drunk or underage person who later causes a crash | You may sue the driver and the business for your injuries |
| Limited dram shop law | Business is liable only in narrow cases such as serving minors | You may sue the business only if facts fit the narrow rule |
| No dram shop law | Business is usually not liable for a drunk customer’s driving | You may have claims only against the driver or others, not the bar |
You can review your state’s alcohol rules through your state alcohol control agency or through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration at https://www.nhtsa.gov/risky-driving/drunk-driving.
What You Must Prove Against A Bar Or Restaurant
Courts do not punish a business for every drink it serves. You must show clear facts. The exact test depends on your state, but you often must prove three things.
- The bar or restaurant served the person alcohol
- The person was clearly drunk or underage when served
- The drunk driving crash caused your injuries
Signs of clear drunkenness can include:
- Slurred speech
- Stumbling or falling
- Aggressive or loud behavior
- Spilled drinks or trouble paying
Some states also look at whether the business trained staff, checked IDs, and watched for warning signs. If a server ignored a clear danger, a court may see that as reckless.
Evidence That Can Support Your Claim
You may feel lost after a crash. Still, certain steps can protect your rights.
Useful evidence can include:
- Police reports that note where the driver was drinking
- Receipts or credit card records from the bar or restaurant
- Security camera video from the business or nearby streets
- Witness statements from staff, customers, or bystanders
- Social media posts that show drinking before the crash
- Medical records that show the driver’s blood alcohol level
You can request the crash report from your state or local police. Many departments explain this process online. The National Transportation Safety Board offers general crash investigation guidance at https://www.ntsb.gov/investigations/Pages/Investigations.aspx.
Who Can Bring A Claim
More than one person may have a claim after a drunk driving crash. You may have rights if you are:
- A driver or passenger in another vehicle
- A pedestrian or cyclist
- A passenger in the drunk driver’s car in some states
- A surviving family member of someone who died
Each state sets time limits, called statutes of limitation. If you wait too long, you lose your claim even if your proof is strong. You protect yourself when you act early.
How Liability Affects Your Recovery
When a bar or restaurant shares blame, your path to recovery can change in three key ways.
- You may have access to larger insurance policies through the business
- You may spread fault between the driver and the business
- You may face strong defense teams hired by the business or its insurer
Court rules also matter. Some states use “comparative fault.” That means a jury may split blame between the driver, the bar, and even you. Your recovery may drop if the court says you share fault. Other states bar recovery if your share of fault passes a set number. You need to know which rule your state uses.
Steps You Can Take After A Suspected Dram Shop Case
After you get medical care, you can take simple steps that guard your claim.
- Write down what you remember about where the driver had been drinking
- Keep photos, bills, and records tied to the crash
- Save contact details for witnesses
- Do not post details about the crash on social media
- Reach out for legal help as soon as you can
You do not have to face a bar or restaurant alone. The law gives you tools. When a business fuels drunk driving, you can ask a court to hold it responsible. You seek not only payment for your losses. You also seek safer choices the next time someone reaches for one more drink before driving home.
