RESPONSIBLE BEVERAGE SERVICE · STATE · MONTANA
Montana law requires alcohol server training for anyone who mixes, serves, or sells alcohol in a licensed establishment, plus immediate managers who supervise such employees. The framework is administered by the Montana Department of Revenue’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Division through the Responsible Alcohol Sales and Service (RASS) program. This page covers who needs training, what the RASS framework requires, validity and renewal, and operational implications for Montana operators.
Last reviewed: [LAST REVIEWED DATE]. This page reflects information available as of the date above. Current Montana requirements, approved providers, and statutory provisions should be verified directly with the Montana Department of Revenue at mtrevenue.gov before relying on this information for compliance. Operators should consult counsel for advice specific to their circumstances.
Alcohol sales and service in Montana are regulated by the Montana Department of Revenue’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Division (ABCD). Server training requirements are codified in the Montana Code Annotated under Title 16 (Alcohol and Tobacco).
Three frameworks operate together:
The permits required to sell alcohol — establishment-level. Issued by the Department of Revenue.
Mandatory Responsible Alcohol Sales and Service training for individuals. The compliance centerpiece for Montana operators.
RASS curricula must be approved by the Montana Department of Revenue. The state maintains a list of approved online providers.
The Responsible Alcohol Sales and Service (RASS) program is the statewide training framework for alcohol servers, sellers, and delivery personnel. Unlike Texas, Montana RASS training is mandatory under state law — not just a Safe Harbor preference. Approved RASS programs cover:
Approved courses are typically a minimum of 2 hours and may be delivered in person, online, or in hybrid formats. Certificates issued by approved providers are valid for three years from the date the final test is passed; recertification requires completing a new course before the prior certification expires. Operators should verify current program approval status with the Department of Revenue before requiring or recommending a specific provider.
Montana law requires RASS training for anyone who mixes, serves, or sells alcoholic beverages, and for managers who supervise such employees. The required scope is broader than many other states — it includes on-premise, off-premise, and delivery roles:
Bartenders, servers, wait staff, supervisors at restaurants, bars, taverns, nightclubs, lounges, and private clubs.
Liquor store, convenience store, and grocery store clerks who sell alcohol for consumption off the premises.
Drivers who deliver alcohol — including third-party platform drivers (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub, and similar).
Roles that do not directly mix, serve, sell, or supervise alcohol service — such as kitchen staff, dishwashers, hosts who only greet and seat, bouncers who do not handle alcohol, or janitorial staff — are generally not required to complete RASS training. Anyone who handles money for alcohol sales, processes alcohol-inclusive checks, or refills alcoholic drinks is treated as a seller-server under Montana’s rules.
RASS certification covers the individual server. It does not, on its own, function as the venue’s internal Responsible Beverage Service program. Montana operators concerned with civil dram shop exposure typically maintain a venue-level written program in addition to individual RASS certifications.
Montana RASS certification covers the individual server. It does not, on its own, serve as the venue’s internal Responsible Beverage Service program. Montana operators concerned with civil dram shop exposure or seeking to demonstrate operational training adequacy in any administrative or insurance context typically maintain both:
The Ultimate Responsible Alcohol Service Manual provides the venue-level program document. For the standalone RBS program document, see the RBS Program Template.
Responsible Beverage Service Pillar →The full RBS framework
TIPS vs ServSafe vs State RBS →Comparison of training programs
Training and Liability Pillar →The broader liability framework
Refusing Service Protocols →Practical refusal scripts and procedures
Ryan Dahlstrom
Author & Expert Witness
20+ years of hospitality operations. Author of The Ultimate Responsible Alcohol Service Manual and active dram shop expert witness.
RegulatorMT Department of Revenue, ABCD
StatuteMCA Title 16 · §16-4-1005
State MandateMandatory · RASS training required
Validity3 years
Hire Deadline60 days from hire date
Verify Atmtrevenue.gov →
A venue-level written RBS program to supplement individual RASS certificates.
The Ultimate Responsible Alcohol Service Manual provides the venue-level written program Montana operators need alongside individual RASS certifications — with acknowledgement forms, refusal protocols, and incident reporting templates.