June 12, 2026

If you are reading this at 2 a.m. from the parking lot of the Harris County Joint Processing Center or from your kitchen table after a sleepless night, take a breath. You are not the first person to search this, and what you do in the next 48 hours matters.

A DWI arrest in Houston is frightening, but it is not the end of your story. It is the start of two separate legal processes that move fast, and one of them has a deadline of just 15 days.

If you were recently arrested, speaking with an experienced Houston DWI lawyer can help you take the right steps immediately.

This guide walks you through the first 48 hours hour by hour, plain-English, no scare tactics. By the end you will know what already happened, what is about to happen, and the single most time-sensitive step to protect your driver’s license.

The 48-Hour Snapshot

Hour 0 – 1: Traffic stop, field sobriety tests, breath or blood test request, arrest

Hour 1 – 6: Transport and booking at the Harris County Joint Processing Center (JPC)

Hour 12 – 24: Magistrate review, probable cause finding, bond set

Hour 24 – 48: Release, the DIC-25 “Notice of Suspension” in your hand, the 15-day ALR clock starts ticking

Everything below expands on that timeline, including the part most people miss until it is too late.

Hour 0 – 1: The Stop, the Tests, and the Arrest

A Houston DWI case almost always begins with a routine traffic stop, a lane change without a signal, a taillight out, or a rolling stop.

To understand how officers justify stops and arrests, it helps to review probable cause in Texas.

What happens next is governed by Texas’s implied consent law. When you got your Texas driver’s license, you legally agreed that if an officer has reasonable grounds to believe you are intoxicated, you will provide a breath or blood sample.

Before asking for that sample, the officer is required to read you a form called the DIC-24, which warns you about the consequences of refusing.

You do not have to perform roadside field sobriety tests. To better understand how these are used against drivers, see standardized field sobriety tests.

Once the officer decides to arrest you, the handcuffs go on and you are headed downtown.

Hour 1 – 6: Booking at the Harris County Joint Processing Center

In Houston, almost every DWI arrestee is routed to the Harris County Joint Processing Center (JPC).

Here is what typically happens:

You are searched and your property is inventoried

You are photographed and fingerprinted

You are medically screened

You may be asked to provide a breath sample or blood draw

You are placed in a holding cell to wait for the magistrate

If you are trying to locate someone after arrest, you can use resources explained in how to find if someone is in jail in Houston.

During booking, the most important thing you can do is stay polite and stay quiet. Do not try to explain what happened.

Hour 12 – 24: Meeting the Magistrate and Setting Bond

Within 48 hours of your arrest, you are brought before a magistrate.

The magistrate:

Reviews probable cause

Sets bond conditions

To better understand how bail works, see understanding the bail and bond process in Texas.

For a first-offense DWI, bond amounts typically range from $500 to $3,000 depending on the circumstances.

Some cases may include additional conditions like ignition interlock devices. These are common in more serious cases such as second DWI offenses in Texas.

Hour 24 – 48: You’re Out. Now the Real Clock Starts.

This is the most important part of the entire process.

You should receive a DIC-25 “Notice of Suspension / Temporary Driving Permit.”

This document:

Acts as a temporary license for 40 days

Starts a 15-day deadline to request an ALR hearing

If you miss that deadline, your license is automatically suspended.

The ALR process is separate from your criminal case and often overlaps with issues like Texas Administrative License Suspension.

Requesting this hearing is one of the most important steps you can take early in your case.

Evidence Starts Disappearing Fast

Within the first 48 hours, critical evidence may be lost if not preserved:

Dash cam footage

Body cam footage

Breathalyzer records

Blood test results

To understand how evidence impacts your case, see evidence in a criminal case.

Your 48-Hour Do / Don’t Checklist

Do

Write down everything you remember

Save all paperwork

Mark your 15-day deadline

Contact a lawyer immediately

Ask about evidence preservation

Don’t

Don’t post on social media

Don’t contact law enforcement to explain

Don’t underestimate the charge

Even a first offense carries serious penalties. Learn more in penalties for DWI in Texas.

What Happens After Day 2

After the first 48 hours, your case continues with:

Formal charges

Arraignment

Pretrial hearings

This follows the broader timeline explained in criminal court process in Houston.

If your license is suspended, you may qualify for an occupational license. Learn more here: occupational driver’s license.

When to Call a Houston DWI Lawyer

The honest answer is: immediately.

Early involvement can impact:

License protection

Evidence preservation

Case strategy

A lawyer can also evaluate dismissal opportunities. Some cases may be dismissed depending on facts, see can a DWI be dismissed in Texas.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long will I be in jail after a DWI arrest?

Most first-time offenders are released within 12–24 hours.

Do I have to take a breathalyzer?

You can refuse, but it may trigger license suspension. Learn more in can you refuse a breathalyzer in Texas.

What is the difference between DUI and DWI?

In Texas, DUI applies to minors, while DWI applies to intoxicated drivers. Full breakdown here: difference between DUI and DWI in Texas.

Does a DWI show up on a background check?

Yes. Even before conviction. Learn how long it stays here: how long does a DWI stay on your record in Texas.

The Bottom Line

The first 48 hours after a Houston DWI arrest are critical.

Understand the timeline, protect your license, and act quickly.

If you or someone you love was just arrested, request a free consultation today:

https://www.thenapierlawfirm.com/free-consultation/