
This guide is for general information only and is not legal advice. Laws change - verify current rules with your state DOT or a licensed attorney before relying on this for any legal matter. Read full disclaimer.
In North Dakota, the DUI statute does not apply to bicyclists — it covers motor-vehicle operators only. North Dakota's DUI statute (NDCC § 39-08-01) reaches anyone in actual physical control of a 'vehicle,' but the general vehicle definition in NDCC § 39-01-01 expressly excludes devices moved by human power. As a result, the standard DUI statute does not reach a person riding a bicycle. An impaired cyclist who endangers others may instead be charged under reckless-operation or public-intoxication statutes. See NDCC § 39-08-01 (Persons under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drugs).
A DUI charge isn't on the table for cyclists in North Dakota, but that's not a license to ride drunk — public-intoxication, reckless-conduct, and disorderly-conduct charges can still apply, and cycling impaired dramatically raises crash risk.
Ride sharp, ride legal
Run a 60-second pre-ride safety check
DUI, impairment, and distraction laws all assume you are riding a bike that is actually safe to ride. The M-check takes a minute and catches the things that get you hurt.
See the M-check guide