Drunk driving deaths in the United States have declined substantially over the last forty years, and the policy interventions that produced the decline are well documented. Lower legal blood alcohol limits, sustained public awareness campaigns, more aggressive enforcement, and the ignition interlock device. The interlock is the least visible of the four, and it has done a disproportionate share of the work.
The data behind that claim is unusually clean. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has summarised research showing that ignition interlock programs reduce repeat drunk driving offenses by roughly 70 percent while the device is installed. That is a public health intervention with effect sizes most clinical interventions would consider exceptional. The mechanism is mechanical rather than psychological. The driver provides a breath sample. If the result exceeds the calibrated threshold, the vehicle does not start. The decision is taken out of the moment.
Programs offering Budget IID services operate inside this regulatory framework. State-certified ignition interlock devices are installed on the vehicles of drivers required by court order or DMV mandate to use them, calibrated and monitored on a regular schedule, and removed at the end of the required period. The program is part compliance infrastructure and part behavioural intervention. The behavioural piece is what produces the long-tail effect, which is that interlock users have lower repeat-offense rates after the device is removed than control populations with similar offense histories.
The economics of interlock programs have improved meaningfully in the last decade. Installation, monthly monitoring fees, and removal costs are typically borne by the driver, but the absolute cost has dropped as competition in the provider market has expanded. Lower-cost providers operate at a price point that makes compliance financially feasible for a wider range of offenders, which matters because interlock effectiveness depends on actually having the device installed rather than the offender opting for a license suspension that produces worse public safety outcomes.
The state programs themselves have continued to evolve. All-offender mandates, where any DUI offense triggers an interlock requirement rather than only repeat offenses, have produced better outcomes than first-offender exemption models. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has tracked the difference, and the policy direction across most states has been to widen rather than narrow the requirement.
For drivers facing an interlock requirement, the practical reality is that the device is part of getting back on the road legally. The clinical reality is that the device produces measurable harm reduction during the period it is installed, and the public health reality is that ignition interlocks have probably saved more lives than most road safety interventions ever invented.
FAQ
How does an ignition interlock device work? The driver provides a breath sample before starting the vehicle. If the sample exceeds the calibrated alcohol threshold, the vehicle does not start.
How long is an interlock typically required? Required duration varies by state and offense severity, ranging from several months to several years.
Are interlocks effective after removal? Repeat-offense rates among former interlock users remain lower than control populations for an extended period after removal.
Who pays for the device? In most states the driver bears installation, monitoring and removal costs, although some states maintain assistance programs for low-income offenders.





