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Illinois Cocktails-to-Go Is Now Permanent — But the DUI and Open Container Laws Haven’t Moved an Inch

W. Scott Hanken

By: W. Scott Hanken | Former Sangamon County Prosecutor | Springfield Criminal Defense & DUI Attorney
Voted “Best Attorney” — Illinois Times Best of Springfield & State Journal-Register Reader’s Choice | Springfield, IL • Sangamon County • (217) 544-4057 • hankenlaw.com

Senate Bill 618 took effect July 1, 2026. Your favorite Springfield bar or restaurant can now permanently deliver that Old Fashioned or margarita to your door. That’s the good news. The legal risk hiding inside that tamper-sealed cup? That part is still very much your problem.

After being born as a pandemic-era lifeline and repeatedly extended since 2020, the Illinois cocktails-to-go framework became permanent law when Governor JB Pritzker signed Senate Bill 618 on December 12, 2025. Effective July 1, 2026, licensed bars and restaurants across Illinois — including right here in Springfield — can now offer sealed cocktails, mixed drinks, and single-serve wine for delivery and curbside pickup without an expiration date hanging over the program.

For consumers, the change is welcome. For drivers, the legal landscape is exactly what it was before. Illinois DUI law, the open container statute, and the transportation rules that govern how alcohol moves inside a motor vehicle are completely unchanged. My name is W. Scott Hanken. I have been defending people charged with DUI and criminal offenses in Sangamon County courts for 37 years — and before that, I spent years as a Sangamon County Assistant State’s Attorney prosecuting these same cases. What follows is what every Springfield-area driver needs to understand before that first order goes through.


The Rules That Did Not Change

Here is what Senate Bill 618 did not touch. Not a single word.

Illinois DUI Law — 625 ILCS 5/11-501

The foundation of Illinois DUI prosecution is 625 ILCS 5/11-501. You cannot lawfully drive or be in actual physical control of a motor vehicle in Illinois when your blood alcohol concentration is 0.08 or above — or when alcohol, drugs, or any intoxicating compound impairs your ability to drive safely, even below 0.08. The source of the alcohol is legally irrelevant. Whether you poured that bourbon from a bottle in your home bar or had it delivered sealed in a tamper-evident cup from a restaurant on South Sixth Street, the standard for impairment is identical.

A first DUI in Illinois is a Class A misdemeanor carrying up to 364 days in jail and fines up to $2,500. The Statutory Summary Suspension that attaches immediately — six months for a first-offense BAC submission, twelve months for refusal — begins the day you receive notice from the officer. A second DUI is a Class A misdemeanor with mandatory imprisonment. A third offense is an aggravated DUI and a Class 2 felony. Aggravated DUI involving death or great bodily harm is a Class 2 or Class 1 felony, and it carries mandatory prison time. None of that changed on July 1, 2026.

Open Container Law — 625 ILCS 5/11-502

Illinois’s open container statute, 625 ILCS 5/11-502, prohibits any driver or passenger from transporting, carrying, or possessing alcoholic liquor in the passenger compartment of a motor vehicle on a public roadway unless it is in the original container with the seal unbroken. The narrow exceptions — limousines with a partition, chartered buses, motor homes — do not apply to ordinary passenger vehicles.

A cocktail-to-go cup, even properly sealed at the restaurant, is not the manufacturer’s original container. The moment that seal is broken inside a passenger vehicle on a public road, you have an open container violation. A conviction for a second offense within twelve months triggers a license suspension under 625 ILCS 5/6-206. Drivers under 21 face license suspension on the first conviction and revocation on the second.

The Cocktails-to-Go Law’s Own Transportation Rule

Here is a detail many people miss. The cocktails-to-go statute itself — 235 ILCS 5/6-28.8 — has a built-in transportation requirement that mirrors the open container law. When a restaurant employee delivers cocktails by vehicle, the sealed containers must be placed in the trunk. If the vehicle has no trunk, they must go in a rear compartment that is not readily accessible to the passenger area. The statute expressly prohibits transporting to-go cocktails in the passenger area of a vehicle. This rule binds the delivery employee — and it equally reflects the expectation for any consumer picking up curbside and placing the order in their car.

Put it on the back seat or the passenger floorboard and you have a problem. Put it in the trunk, drive directly home, and the container is legally irrelevant.

THE RULE IN PLAIN ENGLISH:

Sealed cocktail-to-go containers belong in the trunk or a secured rear compartment. Full stop. Not the cup holder. Not the passenger seat. Not the bag sitting next to you on the floor. Trunk — or rear compartment not accessible to passengers.


The Statutory Compliance Table: What Is Permitted, What Triggers Liability

ScenarioExposure
✅ Sealed cocktail delivered to your home; consumed insideNo criminal exposure
✅ Sealed cocktail picked up curbside, placed in trunk, driven home (container remains sealed)No criminal exposure
❌ Sealed cocktail in the passenger seat or cup holderViolates 235 ILCS 5/6-28.8 and 625 ILCS 5/11-502. Open container; license suspension on 2nd conviction
❌ Opened or unsealed cocktail anywhere in the vehicleOpen container under 625 ILCS 5/11-502; DUI exposure
❌ Driving after consuming cocktail-to-go while impaired or with BAC of 0.08 or aboveDUI under 625 ILCS 5/11-501; Statutory Summary Suspension; Class A misdemeanor minimum
❌ Delivery employee transports cocktails in the passenger area of the vehicleOpen container exposure; establishment faces license penalty
❌ Third-party delivery app (DoorDash, Uber Eats) delivers cocktailsExpressly prohibited by 235 ILCS 5/6-28.8. Establishment violation; delivery driver exposure
❌ Cocktail delivered to a person under 21Illegal sale to a minor under 235 ILCS 5/6-16; establishment criminal exposure

Why Springfield Police Will Still Pull You Over

Here is the reality of DUI enforcement in Sangamon County. Officers do not know what is in your trunk. They do not care that cocktails-to-go is now permanent law. What they observe is your driving pattern, your odor, your eyes, your speech, and your behavior at the window. A cocktail-to-go order from a Springfield restaurant gives law enforcement no reason to treat you differently than any other driver who has been drinking.

If you are stopped and the officer smells alcohol, the encounter is already on a particular trajectory. I have seen it from both sides — as an Assistant State’s Attorney building cases and for 37 years as a defense attorney dismantling them. The presence of a restaurant delivery bag in the back seat does not explain away the odor of alcohol. It does not prevent an arrest. And it does not stop the Statutory Summary Suspension clock from running.

MY 37-YEAR STANDARD ADVICE AT A TRAFFIC STOP:
Provide your driver’s license, vehicle registration, and proof of insurance — nothing more. You are not legally required to answer questions about where you have been, what you have had to drink, or where you are going. Politely decline all field sobriety tests (FSTs). Politely decline the portable breath test (PBT). Neither refusal carries a criminal penalty at the roadside stage. Call an experienced Sangamon County DUI defense attorney immediately. These are not suggestions. This is the advice I have given clients for nearly four decades.


The Unique DUI Risk of the Cocktails-to-Go Era

Cocktails-to-go creates one behavioral risk that did not exist before. In the past, if you ordered alcohol for delivery, it arrived as a bottle of wine or a six-pack — packaged items with obvious container integrity. A sealed cocktail-to-go cup looks less formal. It has a straw hole. It is designed to be convenient. People open them while still in the parking lot. People crack the seal on the way home because they think it is fine since the container was sealed to begin with.

That reasoning does not hold up in a Sangamon County courtroom. Once the seal is broken and the container is in the vehicle, you are in open container territory under 625 ILCS 5/11-502 — period. And if you consume any of the drink before or while driving, you now have both a potential DUI and an open container charge stacked against you.

The practical rule is simple. Treat a sealed cocktail-to-go exactly like you would treat a bottle of whiskey. It goes in the trunk. Do not open it. Do not sip it. You drive to your destination, you go inside, and then you enjoy it.


What About E-Bikes, Mopeds, and Other Vehicles?

The vehicle type matters less than most people assume. Illinois DUI law under 625 ILCS 5/11-501 applies to any motor vehicle. Certain e-bikes fall outside the statute depending on their classification, but mopeds and motorized scooters are fully covered. The open container law under 625 ILCS 5/11-502 similarly applies to motor vehicles on public highways. Do not assume that ordering a cocktail for curbside pickup and loading it onto your e-bike or moped puts you in a legal safe zone. The DUI analysis follows the vehicle classification, and many of those vehicles are firmly in the statute’s reach.


Illinois DUI and Transportation Laws Still in Full Effect

The following key statutes govern alcohol in and around motor vehicles in Illinois. None were amended by Senate Bill 618.

StatuteSubjectKey Threshold
625 ILCS 5/11-501DUI — driving under the influenceBAC 0.08 or above; or any impairment
625 ILCS 5/11-502Open container / alcohol transportationMust be original sealed container in passenger area
625 ILCS 5/11-501.1Implied consent / Statutory Summary Suspension6-month suspension (test); 12-month (refusal), first offense
625 ILCS 5/6-205Mandatory revocationDUI conviction triggers revocation
625 ILCS 5/6-206Discretionary suspensionIncludes 2nd open container conviction within 1 year
235 ILCS 5/6-28.8Cocktails-to-go authorization and rulesSealed container; trunk transport; no third-party delivery

A Note on the Statutory Summary Suspension

If you are arrested for DUI in Sangamon County — whether or not a cocktail-to-go bag is in your trunk — the Statutory Summary Suspension process begins immediately. Under 625 ILCS 5/11-501.1, you have 90 days from the notice date to request a judicial hearing challenging the suspension. I file these challenges as a matter of standard practice when the facts support it. Missing the 90-day window waives that right entirely. If you are arrested, call before you assume you have time to figure it out.

For more on how DUI stops unfold in Sangamon County and what your rights are at each stage, see: Illinois DUI Traffic Stops: What to Do, What to Say, and What Not to Do

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Is it legal to order a cocktail for delivery in Illinois now?

Yes. Senate Bill 618, effective July 1, 2026, permanently authorizes licensed bars and restaurants to sell sealed cocktails and mixed drinks for delivery and curbside pickup under 235 ILCS 5/6-28.8. The drinks must be in tamper-evident, sealed containers and delivered only by restaurant employees — not third-party services like DoorDash.

Does the cocktails-to-go law change Illinois DUI law?

No. Illinois DUI law under 625 ILCS 5/11-501 is completely unchanged. Driving with a BAC of 0.08 or above — or while impaired to any degree — remains a criminal offense regardless of where or how the alcohol was purchased.

Can I have a cocktail-to-go in my car’s passenger seat?

No. Under both 235 ILCS 5/6-28.8 and 625 ILCS 5/11-502, to-go cocktails must go in the trunk or a rear compartment not accessible to passengers. A sealed cup on the passenger seat is an open container violation waiting to happen.

Can I be charged with DUI if my cocktail-to-go is still sealed?

Yes. DUI charges are based on your condition as a driver, not whether the alcohol in the vehicle is open. A sealed container in the trunk does protect you from an open container charge — but if the officer observes impairment, the sealed container in the trunk is legally irrelevant to the DUI count.

What should I do if stopped by police after picking up cocktails-to-go?

Provide your license, registration, and proof of insurance. Say nothing beyond that. Politely decline all field sobriety tests and the portable breath test. Contact W. Scott Hanken, Attorney at Law at (217) 544-4057 immediately.

Can I drink the cocktail in my car in the restaurant parking lot?

No. Consuming alcohol in a vehicle on a public road, lot, or right-of-way carries open container and DUI exposure. Cocktails sold under 235 ILCS 5/6-28.8 are for off-premises consumption at a lawful private location — your home, for example — not in a vehicle.

Does a third-party delivery service like DoorDash or Uber Eats deliver cocktails-to-go?

No. The statute expressly prohibits third-party delivery services from delivering cocktails under 235 ILCS 5/6-28.8. Only employees of the licensed establishment may deliver.


The Bottom Line for Springfield and Sangamon County Drivers

Illinois cocktails-to-go is now a permanent part of Illinois law. That is good for Springfield restaurants. It is good for local distilleries. And it is legally irrelevant to any officer who pulls you over on Clear Lake Avenue, Sixth Street, or Dirksen Parkway and smells alcohol through your window.

The DUI statute has not changed. The open container statute has not changed. The Statutory Summary Suspension has not changed. The only thing that changed is that more alcohol is now legally moving around on Illinois roads in restaurant packaging instead of factory packaging. That increases opportunity for mistakes — and for arrests.

After 37 years defending DUI clients in Sangamon County, I have seen the full range of how these stops unfold. The arrest that begins in a restaurant parking lot looks exactly the same in the Sangamon County Circuit Court as the one that begins on a county highway. If you are facing DUI charges in Springfield or anywhere in Sangamon County, the time to call is now — not after the arraignment.


Ready to Fight Your DUI Charge in Springfield?
Call W. Scott Hanken at (217) 544-4057 or contact us online for a free consultation. We serve clients throughout Springfield, Sangamon County, and Central Illinois.

About the Author: W. Scott Hanken, Attorney at Law
Scott Hanken is a Springfield, Illinois criminal defense attorney with over 37 years of experience, including service as a former Sangamon County prosecutor. He has been voted Best Attorney by the Illinois Times and State Journal-Register, holds an Avvo 10.0 “Superb” rating, and has earned over 250 five-star Google reviews. His firm handles DUI defense, drug crimes, traffic violations, violent crimes, and weapons offenses throughout Sangamon County and Central Illinois.

📍 1100 S 5th St, Springfield, IL 62703 | ☎ (217) 544-4057 | 🌐 hankenlaw.com

This article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is unique — contact an experienced Springfield criminal defense attorney for guidance on your specific situation.

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