delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе issue in this case is whether there is a constitutional right to a trial by jury for persons charged under Nevada law with driving under the influence of alcohol (DUI). Nev. Rev. Stat. §484.379(1) (1987). We hold that there is not.
DUI is punishable by a minimum term of two days’ imprisonment and a maximum term of six months’ imprisonment. §484.3792(l)(a)(2). Alternatively, a trial court may order the defendant “to perform 48 hours of work for the community while dressed in distinctive garb which identifies him: as [a DUI offender].” Ibid. The defendant also must pay a fine ranging from $200 to $1,000. § 484.3792(l)(a)(3). In addition, the defendant automаtically loses his driver’s license for 90 days, §483.460(l)(c), 1 and he must attend, at his own *540 expense, an alcohol abuse education course. §484.3792(1) (a)(1). Repeat DUI offenders are subject to increased penalties. 2
Petitioners Melvin R. Blanton and Mark D. Fraley were charged with DUI in separate incidents. Neither petitioner had a prior DUI conviction. The North Las Vegas, Nevada, Municipal Court denied their respective pretrial demands for a jury trial. On appeal, the Eighth Judicial District Court denied Blanton’s requеst for a jury trial but, a month later, granted Fraley’s. Blanton then appealed to the Supreme Court of Nevada, as did respondent city of North Las Vegas with respect to Fraley. After consolidating the two cases along with several othеrs raising the same issue, the Supreme Court concluded,
inter alia,
that the Federal Constitution does not guarantee a right to a jury trial for a DUI offense because the maximum term of incarceration is only six months and the maximum possible fine is $1,000.
*541
It has long been settled that “there is a category of petty crimes or offenses which is not subject to the Sixth Amendment jury trial provision.”
Duncan
v.
Louisiana,
In using the word “penalty,” we do not refer solely to the maximum prison term authorized for a particular offense. A legislature’s view of the sеriousness of an offense also is reflected in the other penalties that it attaches to the offense. See
United States
v.
Jenkins,
Following this approach, our decision in
Baldwin
established that a defendant is entitled to a jury trial whenever the offense for which he is charged carries a maximum authorized prison term of greater than six months.
Although we did not hold in Baldwin that an offense carrying a maximum prison term of six months or less automatically qualifies as a “petty” offense, 7 and decline to do so today, we do find it appropriate to presume for purposes of the Sixth Amendment that society views such an offense as “petty.” A defendant is entitled to a jury trial in such circumstances only if he can demonstrate that any additional statutory penalties, viewed in conjunction with the maximum authorized period of incarceration, are so severe that they clearly reflect a legislative determination that the offense in question is a “serious” one. This standаrd, albeit somewhat imprecise, should ensure the availability of a jury trial in the rare situation where a legislature packs an offense it deems “serious” with onerous penalties that nonetheless “do not puncture the 6-month incarcerаtion line.” Brief for Petitioners 16. 8
Applying these principles here, it is apparent that petitioners are not entitled to a jury trial. The maximum authorized prison sentence for first-time DUI offenders does not exceed six months. A presumption therеfore exists that the Nevada Legislature views DUI as a “petty” offense for purposes *544 of the Sixth Amendment. Considering the additional statutory penalties as well, we do not believe that the Nevada Legislature has clearly indicated that DUI is a “serious” offense.
In the first place, it is immaterial that a first-time DUI offender may face a minimum term of imprisonment. In settling on six months’ imprisonment as the constitutional demarcation point, we have assumed that a defendant convicted of the оffense in question would receive the maximum authorized prison sentence. It is not constitutionally determinative, therefore, that a particular defendant may be required to serve some amount of jail time less than six months. Likewise, it is of little moment that a defendant may receive the maximum prison term because of the prohibitions on plea bargaining and probation. As for the 90-day license suspension, it, too, will be irrelevant if it runs concurrently with the prison sentence, which we assume for present purposes to be the maximum of six months. 9
We are also unpersuaded by the fact that, instead of a prison sentence, a DUI offender may be ordered to perform 48 hours of community service dressed in clothing identifying him as a DUI offendеr. Even assuming the outfit is the source of some embarrassment during the 48-hour period, 10 such a penalty will be less embarrassing and less onerous than six months in jail. As for the possible $1,000 fine, it is well below the $5,000 level set by Congress in its most recent definition of a “petty” offеnse, 18 U. S. C. §1 (1982 ed., *545 Supp. IV), and petitioners do not suggest that this congressional figure is out of step with state practice for offenses carrying prison sentences of six months or less. 11 Finally, we ascribe little significance to the fact that a DUI offendеr faces increased penalties for repeat offenses. Recidivist penalties of the magnitude imposed for DUI are commonplace and, in any event, petitioners do not face such penalties here. 12
Viewed tоgether, the statutory penalties are not so severe that DUI must be deemed a “serious” offense for purposes of the Sixth Amendment. It was not error, therefore, to deny petitioners jury trials. Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court of Nevada is
Affirmed.
Notes
A restricted license may be issued after 45 days which permits the defendant to travel to and from work, to obtain food and medicine, and to receive regularly scheduled medical care. §483.490(2).
A second DUI offense is punishable by 10 days to six months in prison. § 484.3792(l)(b). The second-time offender also must pay a fine ranging from $500 to $1,000, ibid., and he loses his driver’s license for one year. § 483.460(l)(b)(5). A third DUI offense is punishable by a minimum term of one year’s imprisonment and a maximum term of six years’ imprisonment. § 484.3792(l)(e). The third-time offender аlso roust pay from $2,000 to $5,000, ibid., and he loses his driving privileges for three years. §483.460(l)(a)(2).
A prosecutor may not dismiss a DUI charge “in exchange for a plea of guilty or nolo contendere to a lesser charge or for any other reason unless hе knows or it is obvious” that there is insufficient evidence to prove the offense. § 484.3792(3). Trial courts may not suspend sentences or impose probation for DUI convictions. Ibid.
Accordingly, the Supreme Court of Nevada remanded Blanton’s casе with instructions to proceed without a jury trial. Because Fraley pleaded guilty to DUI before he took an appeal to the District Court, the Supreme Court remanded his case with instructions to reinstate his conviction.
The Sixth Amendment right to a jury triаl applies to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Duncan
v.
Louisiana,
Our decision to move away from inquiries into such matters as the nature of the offense when determining a defendant’s right to a jury trial was presaged in
District of Columbia
v.
Clawans,
In criminal contempt prosecutions, “where no maximum penalty is authоrized, the severity of the penalty actually imposed is the best indication of the seriousness of the particular offense.” Frank, 395 U. S. at, 149.
We held
“only
that a potential sentence in excess of six months’ imprisonment is sufficiently severe by itself to take the offensе out of the category of ‘petty.’”
Baldwin
v.
New York,
In performing this analysis, only penalties resulting from state action, e. g., those mandated by statute or regulation, should be considered. See Note, The Federal Constitutional Right to Trial by Jury'for the Offense of Driving While Intoxiсated, 73 Minn. L. Rev. 122,149-150 (1988) (nonstatu-tory consequences of a conviction “are speculative in nature, because courts cannot determine with any consistency when and if they will occur, especially in the context of society’s cоntinually shifting moral values”).
It is unclear whether the license suspension and prison sentence in fact run concurrently. See Nev. Rev. Stat. §483.460(1) (1987). But even if they do not, we cannot say that a 90-day license suspension is that significant as a Sixth Amendment matter, pаrticularly when a restricted license may be obtained after only 45 days. Cf. Frank v. United. States, supra. Furthermore, the requirement that an offender attend an alcohol abuse education course can only be described as de minimis.
We are hampered in our reviеw of the clothing requirement because the record from the state courts contains neither a description of the clothing nor any details as to where and when it must be worn.
We have frequently looked to the federal classification scheme in determining when a jury trial must be provided. See,
e. g., Muniz
v.
Hoffman,
We decline petitioners’ invitation to survey the statutory penalties for drunken driving in other States. The question is not whether other States consider drunken driving a “serious” offense, but whether Nevadа does. Cf.
Martin
v.
Ohio,
In light of petitioners’ status as first-time offenders, we do not consider whether a repeat offender facing enhanced penalties may state a constitutional claim because of the absence of a jury trial in a prior DUI prosecution.
