Traffic Stop: Your Rights and Exactly What to Say
You must show your license, registration, and insurance — but you can stay silent beyond that, decline a search, refuse roadside field-sobriety and breathalyzer tests, openly record, and ask if you're free to go.
A traffic stop is the most common encounter people have with police — and the one where a few calm words and clear knowledge of your rights make the biggest difference. This guide answers the questions people actually worry about — Can they make me get out? Can they search my car? What about a K-9 unit? Do I have to blow into a breathalyzer? — and gives you the exact words to say. Each answer ties to the Supreme Court case that controls it.
Your core rights in a traffic stop
- You may remain silent beyond providing your license, registration, and insurance.
- You may decline to consent to a search of your vehicle.
- You may ask whether you are free to go.
- You may openly record the interaction on your phone.
- You generally do not have to answer where you’ve been, where you’re going, or whether you’ve been drinking.
Can the officer make me get out of the car?
Yes. In Pennsylvania v. Mimms (1977), the Supreme Court held that during a lawful stop police may order the driver out of the vehicle, and in Maryland v. Wilson (1997) it extended that to passengers. The reasoning is officer safety, and it doesn’t require any suspicion that you did something wrong.
The key point: stepping out is not consenting to a search. Comply with the order to get out, but you keep every other right — you can still say, “I do not consent to a search,” and you don’t have to answer questions.
Can they search my car?
Usually not without your consent, a warrant, or a specific exception. Your car gets less protection than your home, but the Fourth Amendment still applies. Police may search if they have probable cause (the “automobile exception” from Carroll v. United States), if you consent, during a limited search after a lawful arrest, or to inventory an impounded vehicle.
Because consent is one of those exceptions, the most important thing you can do is not give it: “I do not consent to a search.” That single sentence preserves your ability to challenge an unjustified search later in court.
So what actually counts as “probable cause”? It means specific facts — not a hunch or a feeling — that point to a crime. Common examples that can give an officer probable cause to search your car:
- Plain view: drugs, a weapon, or an open alcohol container visible through your window.
- Drug paraphernalia in sight — pipes, baggies, or rolling papers.
- An admission: you or a passenger says there is something illegal in the car.
- A K-9 alert: a trained K-9 signals on the vehicle (Florida v. Harris, 2013).
- The smell of drugs or alcohol coming from the car — though for marijuana, many states where it is now legal have ruled the odor alone is no longer enough.
What does not count as probable cause by itself: being nervous, and refusing to consent. Exercising your rights cannot be used against you or turned into a reason to search.
What about K-9 units (drug-detection dogs)?
A K-9 sniff itself during a lawful stop isn’t a “search” (Illinois v. Caballes, 2005). But there’s a crucial limit: in Rodriguez v. United States (2015), the Court ruled that police cannot extend a stop beyond the time needed to handle the ticket just to wait for a K-9 unit — not without reasonable suspicion. So if the traffic business is done and they are holding you only to fish for a K-9 alert, that prolonged detention can be unlawful. Politely asking “Am I free to go?” puts that clock on the record.
Do I have to take a breathalyzer or field sobriety test?
These tests usually come up when an officer suspects you have been drinking and driving — during a traffic stop, at a DUI/DWI checkpoint, or during the stepped-up patrols police run around bars and nightlife districts, especially on weekend and holiday nights.
Before any arrest — NO. Field-sobriety tests (walk-the-line, follow-the-pen) and the breathalyzer at the scene are voluntary, which means you have the right to decline them. They exist to build evidence against you, and you generally do not have to perform them.
After a lawful DUI/DWI arrest, the stakes change. You can still refuse the official chemical test (the evidentiary breath or blood test), but refusing carries real consequences. The exact penalties are set by state law — every state has an implied-consent law — so the numbers differ from state to state, while the pattern is the same nationwide:
- An automatic license suspension. Almost every state suspends your driver’s license for refusing the official test, and the suspension for a refusal is usually longer than for simply failing it.
- A warrant can force a blood draw anyway. This rule is nationwide: Birchfield v. North Dakota (2016) lets police require a breath test without a warrant after arrest but requires a warrant for a blood draw. Many places run “No Refusal” operations where an on-call judge signs that warrant within minutes.
- Your refusal can be used against you. Refusing is not an automatic “positive” or a guilty verdict — but a prosecutor can point to it at trial as evidence of guilt (South Dakota v. Neville, 1983), and some states make refusing the test a separate crime.
The rights above apply nationwide, but the exact penalties for refusing — how long your license is suspended, and whether refusal is itself a separate crime — vary by state. Check your own state’s laws for the specifics that apply where you live.
Do they have to read me my rights?
Not for ordinary roadside questions. In Berkemer v. McCarty (1984), the Court held a routine traffic stop isn’t “custody,” so police don’t have to read Miranda warnings to ask you questions. That doesn’t take away your right to remain silent — it just means you have to exercise it. If you’re arrested and taken into custody for questioning, Miranda then applies.
What to say at a traffic stop
The right words, said calmly, protect you more than anything else. Keep your hands visible, stay polite, and if you are recording, say what is happening out loud so it is on the record. Here are the exact words for each moment — and what to say if an officer keeps pushing after you have said no.
The calm, standard phrases
- Reaching for your documents: “My license and registration are in the glovebox — is it okay if I reach in and get them?”
- If you are asked to search: “I do not consent to a search.”
- To find out if you can leave: “Officer, am I being detained, or am I free to go?”
If the officer keeps pushing
An officer who is fishing for a reason to search or arrest you will often keep asking after you have already said no — hoping you get nervous, give in, or talk yourself into trouble. You do not have to. Here is what to say in each situation:
If they keep asking to search your car You already declined, and police need a warrant or probable cause — not your nervousness — to search. Say it plainly:
“Officer, I have already answered you. I do not consent to a search of my vehicle or my belongings, and you do not have my permission. If you do not have a warrant, I am asking you to respect my Fourth Amendment rights. Are you trying to coerce me?”
If they keep pushing the field-sobriety test or breathalyzer (before arrest) These tests are voluntary, and declining is not a crime. Make clear you are exercising a right, not resisting:
“I have already declined the field-sobriety and breathalyzer tests. They are voluntary, and I am exercising my right to decline them. I am not refusing to cooperate — I am exercising my rights. Am I being detained, or am I free to go?”
If they keep asking you questions Before an arrest, the officer is allowed to keep asking — but you are never required to answer, no matter how many times or how hard they push. Say it once, clearly, then stay silent; repeating the question does not change your answer:
“Officer, I am exercising my Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. I do not wish to answer any questions, and I will not answer anything without my attorney present.”
If they use the “if you have nothing to hide” tactic Pressure is not the law, and choosing your rights is not evidence of a crime:
“Exercising my rights is not an admission of guilt. I am choosing to use my constitutional rights, and that cannot be held against me. I still do not consent.”
If they keep questioning you after you asked for a lawyer (once you are under arrest) This is your strongest line. Once you are under arrest and ask for a lawyer, the law says they must stop:
“I already told you I want a lawyer, and I am invoking my Fifth Amendment right to remain silent. Why are you still questioning me? Once I ask for an attorney, you are required by law to stop. If you keep questioning me, you are violating my civil rights, and anything you get from me cannot be used against me in court.”
Know the difference — before arrest vs. under arrest:
- Before an arrest (an ordinary stop): the officer can keep asking, and asking again is not against the law — the “must stop” rule has not kicked in yet. But your protection is simple and total: just stay silent. Say it once, clearly — “I am exercising my Fifth Amendment right to remain silent” — and then say nothing else, no matter how many times they ask, how friendly or how aggressive they get, or what they claim. You are never required to answer, and they cannot punish you for staying silent once you have said you are invoking it.
- Under arrest (in custody): the moment you are arrested and clearly ask for a lawyer, police are required by law to stop questioning you (Edwards v. Arizona, 1981). If they keep going, anything they pull out of you can be thrown out of court.
Either way: stay calm, do not physically resist, keep recording, and if your rights are violated, the court is where you hold them accountable.
Can I record the stop?
Yes — you can openly record the interaction on your phone. Recording with a phone in a visible hand is consistent with keeping your hands visible, and federal courts have recognized a First Amendment right to record police performing their duties in public.
Keep it in your glovebox: download the free, printable Traffic Stop Rights Card — the core rights and exact words to say, on one page.
Read the Official Law
The actual text, straight from the official government source:
Go Deeper Into the Law
Read the full text and a clear breakdown of the law behind this answer:
Sources
- Fourth Amendment, U.S. Constitution — Protects against unreasonable searches and seizures.
- Fifth Amendment, U.S. Constitution — Protects the right to remain silent.
- Pennsylvania v. Mimms (1977) — Police may order the driver out of the vehicle during a lawful stop.
- Maryland v. Wilson (1997) — Police may also order passengers out of the vehicle.
- Rodriguez v. United States (2015) — Police cannot extend a stop to run a K-9 sniff without reasonable suspicion.
- Birchfield v. North Dakota (2016) — A breath test can follow a lawful DUI/DWI arrest without a warrant; a blood test needs a warrant.
- Berkemer v. McCarty (1984) — Ordinary roadside questioning during a traffic stop is not 'custody' requiring a Miranda warning.
- Edwards v. Arizona (1981) — Once you ask for a lawyer in custody, police must stop questioning you.
- Carroll v. United States (1925) — The 'automobile exception' — a search with probable cause.
- Florida v. Harris (2013) — A trained K-9's alert can establish probable cause to search a vehicle.
- South Dakota v. Neville (1983) — Refusing a chemical test can be used against you as evidence at trial.
Confused by the legal wording? The CivicShield app explains the law in everyday language for your exact situation.
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