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'''Recalculation of Earned and Good Time Credits''' refers to the process by which the '''Federal Bureau of Prisons''' (BOP) re-evaluates and re-applies time credits earned under the '''First Step Act''' (FSA) of 2018 and statutory good conduct time (GCT) under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b) after certain triggering events, such as a sentence modification, reversal on appeal, vacatur of a count, or correction of a computation error. Recalculation can result in an earlier projected release date or immediate release if the revised credits exceed time remaining.
'''Recalculation of earned and good time credits''' refers to the way the [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]] computes and revises a person's release date as good conduct time and First Step Act earned time credits accrue, change, or are corrected. Two separate credit systems drive these numbers. Good conduct time comes from 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b) and is worth up to 54 days for each year of the sentence the court imposed. First Step Act time credits come from 18 U.S.C. § 3632 and are earned at 10 or 15 days for every 30 days an eligible person spends in approved programming. The two are calculated differently, applied differently, and recalculated for different reasons.<ref>{{cite web |title=An Overview of the First Step Act |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/overview.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


The First Step Act created two distinct credit systems that run in parallel:
The most consequential recalculation in recent memory happened in 2018 and 2019. Congress changed how good conduct time is figured. The Bureau of Prisons then had to redo the math for the entire federal population. On July 19, 2019, 3,163 people walked out of federal custody on a single day because the new method gave them credit they had been denied under the old one.<ref name="fedreg-gct">{{cite web |title=Good Conduct Time Credit Under the First Step Act |url=https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2022/02/11/2022-02876/good-conduct-time-credit-under-the-first-step-act |publisher=Federal Register |date=2022-02-11 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
* '''FSA Time Credits''' (up to 15 days per 30 days of programming, capped at 365 days toward prerelease custody or supervised release)
* '''Good Conduct Time''' (up to 54 days per year of imposed sentence, increased from 47 days by the FSA)


As of October 2025, more than 120,000 federal prisoners have earned over 32 million days of FSA credits, with approximately 29,000 individuals released early via credit application.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Step Act – Time Credits |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/time_credits.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |date=October 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
==Overview==


Recalculation has become a critical post-conviction remedy because sentencing reductions under the First Step Act § 404 (crack retroactivity), Amendment 821 (2023–2024), or successful § 2255 motions frequently entitle the individual to additional credits that were not previously available.
Good conduct time and First Step Act time credits answer different questions. Good conduct time asks whether a person followed the rules. First Step Act credits ask whether a person did the programming. A person can earn both at the same time.


==When Recalculation Is Required==
Good conduct time is a near-automatic deduction. Absent disciplinary findings, it accrues at the statutory rate and shortens the term of imprisonment itself. First Step Act time credits are not automatic. They are earned in 30-day increments tied to participation in specific programs, and they do not shorten the sentence. They move a person earlier into prerelease custody, such as a residential reentry center or home confinement, or they count toward supervised release.<ref name="ecfr-523">{{cite web |title=28 CFR Part 523 Subpart E — First Step Act Time Credits |url=https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-28/chapter-V/subchapter-B/part-523/subpart-E |publisher=Electronic Code of Federal Regulations |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


The BOP must perform a new sentence computation and credit recalculation whenever:
Recalculation happens for ordinary reasons and for unusual ones. The ordinary reason is time passing. Good conduct time vests on the anniversary of a sentence, and First Step Act credits are tallied as new programming is completed, so a person's projected release date shifts on a predictable schedule. The unusual reasons are court action and error. A vacated count, a sentence reduction, or a correction of a prior miscalculation forces the Bureau to start the computation over.


* The sentence is reduced by the court (Rule 35, § 2255, § 3582(c)(2), § 404 First Step Act, compassionate release, etc.)
==Good Conduct Time (§3624(b))==
* A count of conviction is vacated or dismissed on appeal or collateral review
* A computation error is discovered (wrong jail credit, misapplied prior custody credit, etc.)
* An individual becomes newly eligible for FSA credits after a disqualifying offense is removed
* Retroactive guideline amendments lower the applicable range and the court grants reduction


Automatic recalculation also occurs annually on the anniversary of imprisonment for good conduct time and continuously as new FSA programming credits are earned.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Step Act Approved Programs Guide – October 2025 |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/docs/fsa_programs_guide_202510.pdf |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |date=October 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
Good conduct time is the older of the two systems. Federal law allows up to 54 days of credit per year for a person who is serving a sentence of more than one year but less than life and who has not lost credit through discipline.<ref name="cornell-3624">{{cite web |title=18 U.S.C. § 3624 — Release of a prisoner |url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/3624 |publisher=Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


==Key Processes and Procedures==
The 54-day figure was on the books for years before anyone actually received the full amount. The reason was a dispute over four words. The statute said credit was available "at the end of each year" of the term of imprisonment. The Bureau read "term of imprisonment" to mean time actually served. Under that reading, a person could not earn a full 54 days in the final partial year of a sentence, because there was no full year of service left to credit. The arithmetic worked out to roughly 47 effective days per year rather than 54.<ref name="fedreg-gct" />


1. **Triggering Event** – Court issues amended judgment or BOP discovers error.
The Supreme Court upheld the Bureau's reading in ''Barber v. Thomas'' in 2010. The interpretation stood until Congress overrode it. Section 102(b) of the First Step Act, signed December 21, 2018, rewrote the provision so that credit is calculated against the sentence the judge imposed rather than the time served. That single change restored the full 54 days per year for most people.<ref name="fedreg-gct" /><ref name="ussc-fsa">{{cite web |title=First Step Act Earned Time Credits |url=https://www.ussc.gov/education/first-step-act-earned-time-credits |publisher=United States Sentencing Commission |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
2. **Sentence Computation Update** – Designation and Sentence Computation Center (DSCC) in Grand Prairie, Texas, recalculates the full term and applies statutory good time under the corrected sentence length.
3. **FSA Credit Reassessment** – Unit Team reapplies all previously earned FSA credits against the new sentence, removing any 365-day cap limitation that may have existed under the prior longer sentence.
4. **Release Date Adjustment** – New projected release date is entered into SENTRY; if credits now exceed time remaining, immediate prerelease transfer or release is ordered.
5. **Notification** – Inmate receives updated sentence computation sheet (BP-408) and FSA Time Credit Assessment.


Processing normally completes within 30–60 days of receipt of the amended judgment, though emergency releases for over-application cases can occur within hours.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Step Act – Frequently Asked Questions |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/faq.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |date=2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The change was not large per year. The gap between 47 and 54 days is seven days annually. Over a long sentence the days add up. A person serving ten years gained roughly seventy days. People already near the end of their sentences were over their new release dates the moment the recalculation ran. The Bureau prioritized those cases, recalculated the rest of the population by proximity to release, and released 3,163 people on July 19, 2019, the day the recalculated dates took effect.<ref name="fedreg-gct" />


==Eligibility for Recalculation Benefits==
The 2018 statute set the substance. A 2022 final rule, published in the Federal Register on February 11, 2022, settled the mechanics. It confirmed that credit for the last year of a term is credited on the first day of that last year, which removes the partial-year problem that produced the 47-day figure in the first place.<ref name="fedreg-gct" />


Almost all federal prisoners are eligible for good conduct time recalculation upon sentence reduction. For FSA Time Credits:
Good conduct time can be lost. A disciplinary finding can result in disallowance or forfeiture of credit, which pushes the release date later. Recalculation runs in that direction too.<ref name="cornell-3624" />


* Must be classified as minimum or low PATTERN recidivism risk for the last two assessments to apply credits toward prerelease custody
==First Step Act Earned Time Credits==
* Medium/high-risk inmates continue to earn credits but may only apply them toward early supervised release (up to 12 months)
* Certain offenses (listed in 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D)) permanently bar FSA credit earning


Individuals whose disqualifying conviction is later vacated become retroactively eligible for all previously completed programming.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Step Act Overview – 2025 |url=https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/overview.jsp |publisher=Federal Bureau of Prisons |date=2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
First Step Act time credits are the newer system and the more complicated one. They are authorized by 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4). An eligible person earns 10 days of credit for every 30 days of successful participation in evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or productive activities.<ref name="ecfr-523" />


==Accessing Recalculation**
A person can reach a higher rate. Someone assessed at minimum or low risk of recidivism who has maintained that level across two consecutive assessments earns 15 days for every 30 days of programming instead of 10. That is the difference between one day of credit for every three days of programming and one day for every two.<ref name="ecfr-523" /><ref name="famm-explainer">{{cite web |title=First Step Act Earned Time Credits Rule Explainer |url=https://famm.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/First-Step-Act-Earned-Time-Credits-Rule-Explainer.pdf |publisher=Families Against Mandatory Minimums |date=2022-01 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


* No formal application is required for automatic recalculation following a court-ordered sentence reduction.
Risk level is set by a tool called PATTERN, short for Prisoner Assessment Tool Targeting Estimated Risk and Needs. PATTERN scores criminal history, age, institutional conduct, education, program completion, and other factors, then sorts a person into minimum, low, medium, or high risk. The score is reassessed periodically, which is why a person's earning rate and the way credits can be applied both move over time.<ref name="ecfr-523" />
* For suspected computation errors, file BP-8/BP-9 administrative remedy requesting “Sentence Computation Review / FSA Credit Recalculation.”
* Defense counsel or the U.S. Probation Office may also contact the DSCC directly with the amended judgment.


==Impact and Statistics==
The credits do not shorten the sentence. They are applied in two places. Up to 12 months of accumulated credits can move a person earlier into prerelease custody, meaning a residential reentry center or home confinement. Credits beyond that 12-month cap, or credits earned by people not yet cleared for prerelease custody, can be applied toward the term of supervised release that follows imprisonment. To apply credits toward prerelease custody, a person generally must be assessed at minimum or low risk on the two most recent reviews, or be approved by the warden through a petition.<ref name="ecfr-523" /><ref name="evergreen-sr">{{cite web |title=First Step Act Time Credits Applied to Supervised Release |url=https://evergreenattorneys.com/bop-news/first-step-act-time-credits-applied-to-supervised-release/ |publisher=Evergreen Attorneys |date=2025-08-26 |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>


From 2022–2025, over 18,000 individuals received earlier release dates through FSA credit recalculation following Amendment 821 and § 404 reductions, averaging 14 months of additional credit per person.<ref>{{cite web |title=Retroactive Application of Amendment 821 – Status Report October 2025 |url=https://www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/amendment-process/reader-friendly-amendments/2025-amendment-821-report.pdf |publisher=United States Sentencing Commission |date=October 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
Because PATTERN scores change and programming continues, the credit total is never static. The Bureau recalculates it as new programming is completed, as assessments are updated, and as risk levels move. Credits can also be lost. A serious disciplinary infraction can cost earned credits, though lost credits can be restored once a person returns to compliance.<ref name="ecfr-523" />


Recidivism for those released via FSA credits remains 12–15% lower than the general BOP population.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Step Act Annual Report – 2025 |url=https://www.justice.gov/dag/page/file/1711xxx/download |publisher=U.S. Department of Justice |date=April 2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
==Eligibility and Exclusions==


==Criticisms and Challenges==
The two credit systems have different eligibility rules.


Delays in recalculation after court orders have led to documented over-incarceration cases (hundreds of days in some instances). The BOP’s auto-calculation software (FSA Credit Module) has been criticized for errors in handling vacated counts and retroactive eligibility. Litigation in 2024–2025 forced manual overrides in thousands of cases.<ref>{{cite web |title=Goodman v. Warden – Class Action Settlement (FSA Credit Recalculation) |url=https://www.aclu.org/cases/goodman-v-warden |publisher=American Civil Liberties Union |date=2025 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
Good conduct time reaches almost everyone. A person serving more than one year and less than a life sentence is eligible. Life sentences earn no good conduct time because there is no release date to advance. Disciplinary findings reduce the amount but do not remove the eligibility itself.<ref name="cornell-3624" />


==Historical Background==
First Step Act time credits are narrower. Two things can block them. The first is the conviction. The statute lists disqualifying offenses at 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D). That list includes a set of serious violent crimes, sex offenses, certain terrorism offenses, and other specified felonies. A person convicted of a listed offense cannot earn First Step Act credits at all, regardless of programming or risk score, and that bar is permanent for that conviction.<ref name="ecfr-523" /><ref name="famm-explainer" />


Good conduct time originated with the Act of June 21, 1866, and was codified at 18 U.S.C. § 4161–4166 until repealed by the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984. The current 54-day formula was enacted by the Prison Litigation Reform Act amendment in 1995 and clarified by ''Barber v. Thomas'' (2010). The First Step Act of 2018 restored the full 54 days (previously calculated as 47 days effective) and created the entirely new FSA Time Credit system effective January 2022.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Step Act of 2018 – Public Law 115-391 |url=https://www.congress.gov/115/plaws/publ391/PLAW-115publ391.pdf |publisher=U.S. Congress |date=December 21, 2018 |access-date=November 24, 2025}}</ref>
The second is application rather than earning. A person who is eligible to earn credits may still be unable to apply them toward prerelease custody if their PATTERN risk level is too high. Credits keep accruing in that situation. They are held until the risk level drops or the warden approves their use, and in the meantime they can still count toward supervised release.<ref name="ecfr-523" /><ref name="evergreen-sr" />


==See also==
Eligibility can change after sentencing. If a disqualifying count is vacated on appeal or through a post-conviction motion, the bar can lift, and the Bureau may then credit programming the person completed while the disqualifying count was still on the record. That is one of the situations that forces a full recalculation.<ref name="ecfr-523" />
* [[First Step Act]]
* [[Federal Bureau of Prisons]]
* [[Good Conduct Time Credit]]
* [[Sentence Computation]]


==External links==
Detainers and immigration status complicate application. A person subject to a final order of removal generally cannot apply First Step Act credits toward release, which has been the subject of separate Bureau guidance and litigation.<ref name="ecfr-523" />
* [https://www.bop.gov/inmates/fsa/docs/fsa_time_credit_calculation.pdf BOP FSA Time Credit Calculation Guide (2025)]
 
* [https://www.bop.gov/policy/progstat/5410_01.pdf Program Statement 5410.01 – First Step Act Time Credits]
==Frequently Asked Questions==
 
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=What is the difference between good conduct time and First Step Act credits?|answer=Good conduct time, under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b), is up to 54 days per year for following prison rules, and it shortens the sentence itself. First Step Act earned time credits, under 18 U.S.C. § 3632, are 10 or 15 days for every 30 days of approved programming, and they move a person earlier into prerelease custody or count toward supervised release rather than shortening the sentence.}}
{{FAQ|question=Why did the First Step Act recalculate good conduct time?|answer=Before the First Step Act, the Bureau of Prisons calculated good conduct time against time actually served, which produced roughly 47 effective days per year instead of the 54 days the statute allowed. The First Step Act, signed December 21, 2018, changed the calculation to the sentence the court imposed. The Bureau then recalculated every release date and on July 19, 2019, released 3,163 people whose new dates had already passed.}}
{{FAQ|question=How many days of good conduct time can a federal prisoner earn per year?|answer=Up to 54 days for each year of the sentence imposed, for a person serving more than one year and less than a life sentence, provided no credit has been lost through discipline.}}
{{FAQ|question=How many First Step Act credits can you earn?|answer=Ten days of credit for every 30 days of successful programming. A person assessed at minimum or low risk on two consecutive PATTERN assessments earns 15 days for every 30 days instead.}}
{{FAQ|question=Who is not eligible for First Step Act time credits?|answer=People convicted of offenses listed at 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D), including certain serious violent crimes, sex offenses, and terrorism offenses, cannot earn First Step Act credits. People with a final order of removal generally cannot apply credits toward release. A high PATTERN risk score does not stop credits from accruing but can block their use toward prerelease custody until the score drops.}}
{{FAQ|question=Can First Step Act credits be lost?|answer=Yes. A serious disciplinary infraction can cost earned credits. Lost credits can be restored once the person returns to compliance with program rules.}}
{{FAQ|question=What triggers a recalculation of credits?|answer=Routine events such as the annual vesting of good conduct time and the completion of new programming trigger ordinary recalculation. A court-ordered sentence reduction, a vacated count, a PATTERN reassessment, or the correction of a prior computation error triggers a full recalculation of the projected release date.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


==References==
==References==
<references />
<references />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Credits, Recalculation of Earned and Good Time}}
[[Category:Life Inside Federal Prison]]
[[Category:Federal Criminal Law]]
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{{MetaDescription|How federal good conduct time under § 3624(b) and First Step Act earned time credits under § 3632 are calculated and recalculated, with eligibility rules and exclusions.}}

Latest revision as of 13:54, 3 June 2026

Recalculation of earned and good time credits refers to the way the Federal Bureau of Prisons computes and revises a person's release date as good conduct time and First Step Act earned time credits accrue, change, or are corrected. Two separate credit systems drive these numbers. Good conduct time comes from 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b) and is worth up to 54 days for each year of the sentence the court imposed. First Step Act time credits come from 18 U.S.C. § 3632 and are earned at 10 or 15 days for every 30 days an eligible person spends in approved programming. The two are calculated differently, applied differently, and recalculated for different reasons.[1]

The most consequential recalculation in recent memory happened in 2018 and 2019. Congress changed how good conduct time is figured. The Bureau of Prisons then had to redo the math for the entire federal population. On July 19, 2019, 3,163 people walked out of federal custody on a single day because the new method gave them credit they had been denied under the old one.[2]

Overview

Good conduct time and First Step Act time credits answer different questions. Good conduct time asks whether a person followed the rules. First Step Act credits ask whether a person did the programming. A person can earn both at the same time.

Good conduct time is a near-automatic deduction. Absent disciplinary findings, it accrues at the statutory rate and shortens the term of imprisonment itself. First Step Act time credits are not automatic. They are earned in 30-day increments tied to participation in specific programs, and they do not shorten the sentence. They move a person earlier into prerelease custody, such as a residential reentry center or home confinement, or they count toward supervised release.[3]

Recalculation happens for ordinary reasons and for unusual ones. The ordinary reason is time passing. Good conduct time vests on the anniversary of a sentence, and First Step Act credits are tallied as new programming is completed, so a person's projected release date shifts on a predictable schedule. The unusual reasons are court action and error. A vacated count, a sentence reduction, or a correction of a prior miscalculation forces the Bureau to start the computation over.

Good Conduct Time (§3624(b))

Good conduct time is the older of the two systems. Federal law allows up to 54 days of credit per year for a person who is serving a sentence of more than one year but less than life and who has not lost credit through discipline.[4]

The 54-day figure was on the books for years before anyone actually received the full amount. The reason was a dispute over four words. The statute said credit was available "at the end of each year" of the term of imprisonment. The Bureau read "term of imprisonment" to mean time actually served. Under that reading, a person could not earn a full 54 days in the final partial year of a sentence, because there was no full year of service left to credit. The arithmetic worked out to roughly 47 effective days per year rather than 54.[2]

The Supreme Court upheld the Bureau's reading in Barber v. Thomas in 2010. The interpretation stood until Congress overrode it. Section 102(b) of the First Step Act, signed December 21, 2018, rewrote the provision so that credit is calculated against the sentence the judge imposed rather than the time served. That single change restored the full 54 days per year for most people.[2][5]

The change was not large per year. The gap between 47 and 54 days is seven days annually. Over a long sentence the days add up. A person serving ten years gained roughly seventy days. People already near the end of their sentences were over their new release dates the moment the recalculation ran. The Bureau prioritized those cases, recalculated the rest of the population by proximity to release, and released 3,163 people on July 19, 2019, the day the recalculated dates took effect.[2]

The 2018 statute set the substance. A 2022 final rule, published in the Federal Register on February 11, 2022, settled the mechanics. It confirmed that credit for the last year of a term is credited on the first day of that last year, which removes the partial-year problem that produced the 47-day figure in the first place.[2]

Good conduct time can be lost. A disciplinary finding can result in disallowance or forfeiture of credit, which pushes the release date later. Recalculation runs in that direction too.[4]

First Step Act Earned Time Credits

First Step Act time credits are the newer system and the more complicated one. They are authorized by 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4). An eligible person earns 10 days of credit for every 30 days of successful participation in evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or productive activities.[3]

A person can reach a higher rate. Someone assessed at minimum or low risk of recidivism who has maintained that level across two consecutive assessments earns 15 days for every 30 days of programming instead of 10. That is the difference between one day of credit for every three days of programming and one day for every two.[3][6]

Risk level is set by a tool called PATTERN, short for Prisoner Assessment Tool Targeting Estimated Risk and Needs. PATTERN scores criminal history, age, institutional conduct, education, program completion, and other factors, then sorts a person into minimum, low, medium, or high risk. The score is reassessed periodically, which is why a person's earning rate and the way credits can be applied both move over time.[3]

The credits do not shorten the sentence. They are applied in two places. Up to 12 months of accumulated credits can move a person earlier into prerelease custody, meaning a residential reentry center or home confinement. Credits beyond that 12-month cap, or credits earned by people not yet cleared for prerelease custody, can be applied toward the term of supervised release that follows imprisonment. To apply credits toward prerelease custody, a person generally must be assessed at minimum or low risk on the two most recent reviews, or be approved by the warden through a petition.[3][7]

Because PATTERN scores change and programming continues, the credit total is never static. The Bureau recalculates it as new programming is completed, as assessments are updated, and as risk levels move. Credits can also be lost. A serious disciplinary infraction can cost earned credits, though lost credits can be restored once a person returns to compliance.[3]

Eligibility and Exclusions

The two credit systems have different eligibility rules.

Good conduct time reaches almost everyone. A person serving more than one year and less than a life sentence is eligible. Life sentences earn no good conduct time because there is no release date to advance. Disciplinary findings reduce the amount but do not remove the eligibility itself.[4]

First Step Act time credits are narrower. Two things can block them. The first is the conviction. The statute lists disqualifying offenses at 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D). That list includes a set of serious violent crimes, sex offenses, certain terrorism offenses, and other specified felonies. A person convicted of a listed offense cannot earn First Step Act credits at all, regardless of programming or risk score, and that bar is permanent for that conviction.[3][6]

The second is application rather than earning. A person who is eligible to earn credits may still be unable to apply them toward prerelease custody if their PATTERN risk level is too high. Credits keep accruing in that situation. They are held until the risk level drops or the warden approves their use, and in the meantime they can still count toward supervised release.[3][7]

Eligibility can change after sentencing. If a disqualifying count is vacated on appeal or through a post-conviction motion, the bar can lift, and the Bureau may then credit programming the person completed while the disqualifying count was still on the record. That is one of the situations that forces a full recalculation.[3]

Detainers and immigration status complicate application. A person subject to a final order of removal generally cannot apply First Step Act credits toward release, which has been the subject of separate Bureau guidance and litigation.[3]

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the difference between good conduct time and First Step Act credits?

Good conduct time, under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b), is up to 54 days per year for following prison rules, and it shortens the sentence itself. First Step Act earned time credits, under 18 U.S.C. § 3632, are 10 or 15 days for every 30 days of approved programming, and they move a person earlier into prerelease custody or count toward supervised release rather than shortening the sentence.


Q: Why did the First Step Act recalculate good conduct time?

Before the First Step Act, the Bureau of Prisons calculated good conduct time against time actually served, which produced roughly 47 effective days per year instead of the 54 days the statute allowed. The First Step Act, signed December 21, 2018, changed the calculation to the sentence the court imposed. The Bureau then recalculated every release date and on July 19, 2019, released 3,163 people whose new dates had already passed.


Q: How many days of good conduct time can a federal prisoner earn per year?

Up to 54 days for each year of the sentence imposed, for a person serving more than one year and less than a life sentence, provided no credit has been lost through discipline.


Q: How many First Step Act credits can you earn?

Ten days of credit for every 30 days of successful programming. A person assessed at minimum or low risk on two consecutive PATTERN assessments earns 15 days for every 30 days instead.


Q: Who is not eligible for First Step Act time credits?

People convicted of offenses listed at 18 U.S.C. § 3632(d)(4)(D), including certain serious violent crimes, sex offenses, and terrorism offenses, cannot earn First Step Act credits. People with a final order of removal generally cannot apply credits toward release. A high PATTERN risk score does not stop credits from accruing but can block their use toward prerelease custody until the score drops.


Q: Can First Step Act credits be lost?

Yes. A serious disciplinary infraction can cost earned credits. Lost credits can be restored once the person returns to compliance with program rules.


Q: What triggers a recalculation of credits?

Routine events such as the annual vesting of good conduct time and the completion of new programming trigger ordinary recalculation. A court-ordered sentence reduction, a vacated count, a PATTERN reassessment, or the correction of a prior computation error triggers a full recalculation of the projected release date.


References

  1. "An Overview of the First Step Act". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 "Good Conduct Time Credit Under the First Step Act". Federal Register. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 "28 CFR Part 523 Subpart E — First Step Act Time Credits". Electronic Code of Federal Regulations. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "18 U.S.C. § 3624 — Release of a prisoner". Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  5. "First Step Act Earned Time Credits". United States Sentencing Commission. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  6. 6.0 6.1 "First Step Act Earned Time Credits Rule Explainer". Families Against Mandatory Minimums. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  7. 7.0 7.1 "First Step Act Time Credits Applied to Supervised Release". Evergreen Attorneys. Retrieved 2026-06-03.