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<!-- META_DESCRIPTION: Comprehensive guide to federal prison reentry processes. Understand the phases of release from BOP custody through supervised release, including halfway houses, home confinement, and critical reentry tasks. -->
'''Federal prison reentry''' is the process of moving from Bureau of Prisons custody back to community life. For most people it is not a single event on a release date. It happens in stages. A person may spend the last months of a sentence in a halfway house, then in home confinement, and only after the prison term ends does a separate court-ordered period of supervision begin. Each stage has its own rules, its own supervising authority, and its own consequences for breaking the rules.


'''Reentry''' in the federal criminal justice system refers to the multi-phase process of transitioning from incarceration back to community life. Unlike the popular misconception of simply "leaving prison," federal reentry involves distinct stages—each with its own requirements, restrictions, and opportunities. Understanding this process is essential for individuals preparing for release and families supporting their loved ones' return.
The structure matters because the legal status changes at each step. A person living in a halfway house is still serving a prison sentence. A person on supervised release is not. Understanding which stage applies, and who is in charge of it, shapes everything from where someone can sleep to whether a missed appointment sends them back to a secure facility.


The federal reentry system is designed to provide graduated release, allowing individuals to progressively rebuild their lives while maintaining appropriate supervision. From pre-release planning inside prison through Residential Reentry Centers (halfway houses), home confinement, and ultimately supervised release, each phase serves a specific purpose in preparing returning citizens for successful reintegration.
== Overview ==


This article provides a roadmap for navigating federal reentry, explaining what to expect at each stage and identifying critical tasks for building a stable foundation in the community.
Federal sentences are set by the court at sentencing. The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) then calculates how much of that term a person will actually serve in custody. Two things reduce the time behind bars. The first is good conduct time. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b), a person can earn up to 54 days per year of good conduct time by avoiding disciplinary problems.<ref name="usc3624">{{cite web |title=18 U.S. Code § 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> The second is First Step Act time credits, described below.


== Summary ==
Near the end of a sentence, the BOP can move someone into prerelease custody. That means a community-based setting instead of a prison. The two main forms are a Residential Reentry Center, commonly called a halfway house, and home confinement. Both are still BOP custody. The sentence keeps running. A rule violation in either setting can send a person back to a secure facility.


Federal reentry is a structured, multi-phase process rather than a single event. While incarcerated, individuals work with their unit team on release preparation and document acquisition. Many defendants spend their final 6-12 months of Bureau of Prisons (BOP) custody in a Residential Reentry Center (halfway house), where they must secure employment and begin rebuilding community ties. Some transition to home confinement, still under BOP custody but living at an approved residence. Only after BOP custody ends does supervised release begin, transferring oversight from BOP to the U.S. Probation Office. Throughout this process, returning citizens must address critical practical needs: securing housing, finding employment, opening bank accounts, arranging healthcare continuity, reuniting with family, and understanding their legal obligations. Success depends on proactive planning, compliance with requirements at each phase, and accessing available support resources.
When the prison term is finished, custody ends. If the sentencing judge ordered a term of supervised release, that term starts now. Supervision shifts from the BOP to a United States Probation Officer attached to the federal district court. Supervised release is a distinct part of the sentence. It is not parole, which the federal system abolished for offenses committed after November 1, 1987.


== Understanding the Reentry Timeline ==
Reentry also involves practical work that has nothing to do with custody status. People returning to the community need identification, a place to live, income, a bank account, and continued medical care. Much of this is harder for someone with a felony conviction, and the difficulties are often called collateral consequences.


=== You Don't Simply "Leave Prison" ===
== Prerelease Custody (Halfway Houses and Home Confinement) ==


One of the most common misconceptions about federal release is that incarcerated individuals simply walk out of prison on their release date. In reality, for most federal defendants, the transition is gradual:
Prerelease custody is the bridge between a prison cell and the community. The BOP places people into it under two separate legal authorities, and the difference affects how long a placement can last.


* '''Pre-release planning''' begins months before leaving the main facility
The older authority is 18 U.S.C. § 3624(c). It directs the BOP to place a person, to the extent practicable, in conditions that prepare them for reentry during the final portion of the sentence. Under this section, time in a Residential Reentry Center may not exceed 12 months. Home confinement under the same section is capped at the shorter of 10 percent of the sentence or six months.<ref name="usc3624"/>
* '''Residential Reentry Center''' (halfway house) placement typically covers the final 6-12 months of the sentence
* '''Home confinement''' may follow halfway house placement
* '''Supervised release''' begins only after all BOP custody ends


Each phase involves different levels of restriction, different supervising authorities, and different requirements. Understanding this structure helps individuals and families plan appropriately.
The newer authority comes from the First Step Act of 2018. It created a system of earned time credits. A person who is eligible and who completes evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or approved productive activities earns 10 days of credit for every 30 days of successful participation. Someone who is assessed at minimum or low risk of recidivism and stays there earns an additional 5 days per 30-day period, for 15 days total.<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><ref name="bop_fsa">{{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>


=== BOP Custody Continues Through Transition ===
These credits do two things. They can move a person into prerelease custody sooner, and they can move the start of supervised release forward by up to 12 months. The credits do not apply automatically. Several offenses are excluded from earning them, and the BOP will not apply credits until the amount earned matches the time left on the sentence and the person's risk assessment supports it.<ref name="ussc_fsa"/><ref name="bop_fsa"/>


A crucial point: individuals in halfway houses and on BOP home confinement are still serving their prison sentence and remain under Bureau of Prisons custody. The sentence calculation continues, and violations can result in return to a secure facility.
=== Residential Reentry Centers ===


Only when BOP custody ends—when the sentence (as reduced by good time and First Step Act credits) is complete—does the person transition to supervised release under the U.S. Probation Office. This distinction affects legal status, rights, and the consequences of violations.
A Residential Reentry Center is a community facility, often run by a contractor, where residents live while transitioning out. Days are structured. Residents sign in and out, are subject to counts and curfews, and submit to drug and alcohol testing. Most residents are required to look for and hold a job. Once working, a resident typically pays subsistence, a portion of earnings put toward the cost of the housing. Leaving the facility, including for work, requires approval.


=== Transition to U.S. Probation Supervision ===
Not everyone passes through a halfway house. Some people are released straight from the institution, especially on shorter sentences. Some go directly to home confinement. Some are turned over to immigration authorities for removal. Placement depends on the sentence, the available bed space, the release plan, and the person's risk and needs assessment.


When BOP custody ends, supervision transfers from the Bureau of Prisons to the U.S. Probation Office. This marks the beginning of supervised release—a separate component of the sentence imposed at the original sentencing. The individual must report to their assigned probation officer and comply with all conditions of supervised release.
=== Home Confinement ===


== Phase 1: Pre-Release Planning (Inside) ==
Home confinement lets a person serve part of the BOP term at an approved residence instead of a facility. It is usually monitored, often through GPS or other electronic check-in. The person must stay at the residence except for approved activities such as work, medical appointments, or programming. Employment is generally expected. Contact with the supervising Residential Reentry Management office continues, and drug and alcohol testing is standard.


=== Release Preparation Programs ===
The point worth repeating is that home confinement under the BOP is not supervised release. The person remains in BOP custody. A violation can mean a return to a halfway house or to a secure prison, and the rules differ from those that govern supervised release.


The Bureau of Prisons offers release preparation programs to help individuals transition to community life. These programs cover topics such as:
== Supervised Release ==


* Job readiness and employment skills
Supervised release is a term of court-ordered supervision that follows the prison sentence. The court imposes it at the original sentencing under 18 U.S.C. § 3583. It runs after custody ends, not during it.<ref name="usc3583">{{cite web |title=18 U.S. Code § 3583 - Inclusion of a term of supervised release after imprisonment |url=https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/3583 |publisher=Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School |access-date=2026-06-03}}</ref>
* Financial literacy and budgeting
* Housing resources
* Healthcare continuity
* Family reunification
* Legal obligations post-release
* Substance abuse awareness


Participation in these programs demonstrates initiative and may positively influence halfway house placement decisions.
When the prison term is complete, oversight passes from the BOP to a United States Probation Officer. The person is generally required to report to the probation office in the district of release within 72 hours. The first meeting covers the conditions of release, the reporting schedule, and immediate needs such as housing and work.


=== Unit Team Meetings ===
Every term of supervised release carries mandatory conditions set by statute. These include not committing another crime, not unlawfully possessing a controlled substance, submitting to drug testing, and cooperating in the collection of a DNA sample where required. On top of these, courts impose standard conditions, such as reporting to the probation officer, staying within the judicial district without permission, and keeping the officer informed of employment and residence. Courts can also add special conditions tailored to the case, such as mental health or substance abuse treatment, financial disclosures, or restrictions on contact with certain people.<ref name="usc3583"/>


In the months before expected release, individuals meet with their unit team (case manager, counselor, unit manager) to discuss:
The probation officer's role mixes monitoring and assistance. Officers verify employment and residence, conduct testing, and respond to violations. They also connect people with treatment, job programs, and other services. A violation can lead the court to modify the conditions, extend supervision, or revoke release and impose additional prison time.


* Projected release date calculations
A term of supervised release can sometimes end early. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e), a court may terminate supervision after the person has served at least one year, if the conduct of the person and the interest of justice support it.<ref name="usc3583"/>
* Halfway house placement recommendations
* Release residence approval
* Special needs or concerns
* Documentation requirements


These meetings are important opportunities to advocate for preferred placement locations and address any issues that might affect release.
== Reentry Challenges ==


=== Calculating Release Date ===
The legal stages are only part of reentry. The harder part for many people is rebuilding the ordinary infrastructure of a life. The obstacles that follow a conviction are known as collateral consequences, and they reach into housing, work, finances, and civic life.


Understanding your release date calculation is essential for planning. The calculation involves:
Identification comes first. Without a state ID, a Social Security card, and often a birth certificate, almost nothing else can move. Many people leave custody without these documents, and replacing them takes time. Some facilities help with applications before release. Starting early matters, because arriving at a halfway house without ID makes finding a job or signing a lease much harder.


'''Sentence imposed''': The prison term ordered by the court
Housing is a recurring barrier. Landlords run background checks, and a conviction can mean a denied application. Federal rules let public housing authorities exclude applicants for certain offenses. During prerelease custody, any residence must also be approved by the supervising authority. Transitional housing programs and second-chance landlords exist, but they vary widely by city.


'''Good conduct time''': Under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b), inmates can earn up to 54 days per year of good conduct time, credited after each year of the sentence. The actual credit depends on the sentence length and any disciplinary issues.
Employment is both a requirement and an obstacle. People in halfway houses and on supervised release are usually expected to work. At the same time, background checks, gaps in work history, and employer reluctance to hire people with records all cut the other way. Ban-the-box laws in some jurisdictions delay when an employer can ask about criminal history, but they do not erase it, and an internet search can surface a case in seconds.


'''First Step Act Earned Time Credits''': The First Step Act of 2018 allows eligible inmates to earn additional time credits through participation in evidence-based recidivism reduction programs and productive activities. These credits can advance release to supervised release or home confinement.
Banking can be its own hurdle. Some banks screen applicants and deny accounts to people with prior financial offenses or with negative records in account-screening databases like ChexSystems. Without an account, receiving a paycheck through direct deposit and paying rent become harder.


'''Halfway house/home confinement time''': Time in RRC or home confinement counts toward the sentence, not toward supervised release.
Health care continuity matters most for people with chronic conditions or ongoing prescriptions. Getting medical records, a supply of medication for the transition, and enrollment in coverage such as Medicaid or a marketplace plan are tasks that are easier to start before release than after.


For detailed information, see [[Earned Time Credits Under the First Step Act]] and [[Federal Good Time Credit Policies]].
Civic consequences round out the list. Voting rights for people with felony convictions are set by the law of the state where they live, and the rules vary. Some states restore the vote upon release from custody, others after supervision ends, and a few require a separate step.


=== Securing Identification Documents ===
One collateral consequence specific to the modern era is the online record. News coverage, Department of Justice press releases, and court documents on PACER stay searchable for years. An employer or landlord who searches a name can find a case long after the sentence is served. Accurate reporting on a criminal case is protected speech, and government press releases are generally retained for transparency, so the information tends to persist.


Obtaining identification before release is critical. Many facilities assist with:
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
{{FAQSection/Start}}
{{FAQ|question=What are the stages of federal prison reentry?|answer=For most people, reentry moves through prerelease custody and then supervised release. Prerelease custody can include a Residential Reentry Center (halfway house) and home confinement, both of which are still Bureau of Prisons custody. After the prison term ends, any court-ordered term of supervised release begins under a United States Probation Officer.}}
{{FAQ|question=Is a halfway house still part of a prison sentence?|answer=Yes. A person in a Residential Reentry Center or on home confinement under the Bureau of Prisons is still serving the prison sentence. The sentence keeps running, and a rule violation can result in a return to a secure facility. Supervised release does not begin until BOP custody ends.}}
{{FAQ|question=How long can a person stay in a federal halfway house?|answer=Under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(c), placement in a Residential Reentry Center may not exceed 12 months. Home confinement under the same section is limited to the shorter of 10 percent of the sentence or six months. First Step Act time credits can affect when prerelease custody begins.}}
{{FAQ|question=What are First Step Act time credits?|answer=They are credits an eligible person can earn by completing recidivism reduction programming or approved activities. A person earns 10 days of credit for every 30 days of successful participation, and 15 days per 30 days if assessed and maintained at minimum or low recidivism risk. The credits can move someone into prerelease custody sooner or move the start of supervised release forward by up to 12 months.}}
{{FAQ|question=What is the difference between home confinement and supervised release?|answer=Home confinement under the Bureau of Prisons is part of the prison sentence and is supervised by the BOP. Supervised release is a separate term ordered by the sentencing court that begins after the prison term ends and is supervised by a United States Probation Officer. The rules and the consequences of a violation differ between the two.}}
{{FAQ|question=Can supervised release end early?|answer=Sometimes. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e), a court may terminate supervised release after a person has served at least one year, if the person's conduct and the interest of justice support it.}}
{{FAQ|question=Will a federal case still appear in online searches after release?|answer=Often, yes. Department of Justice press releases, news coverage, and court records on PACER can remain searchable for years. Accurate reporting on a criminal case is protected speech, and government press releases are generally kept for transparency, so the information tends to persist after a sentence is served.}}
{{FAQSection/End}}


'''Social Security card''': If your card was lost or expired, you can apply for a replacement through the institution
== References ==
 
'''State ID or driver's license''': Some states allow pre-release applications; others require in-person appearance after release
 
'''Birth certificate''': May be needed to obtain other identification
 
'''Other documents''': Discharge papers, medical records, educational certificates earned during incarceration
 
Begin this process early, as obtaining documents can take weeks or months. Arriving at a halfway house without identification creates significant barriers to employment and housing.
 
== Phase 2: Residential Reentry Center (Halfway House) ==
 
=== When This Applies ===
 
Most federal inmates are considered for RRC placement during the final portion of their sentence. The Bureau of Prisons is authorized to place inmates in RRCs for up to 12 months, though the First Step Act increased consideration for longer placements based on individual needs.
 
Not everyone goes to a halfway house. Some individuals:
* Are released directly from the institution (particularly for shorter sentences)
* Transfer directly to home confinement
* Are deported upon release
* Have other circumstances affecting placement
 
=== Duration ===
 
Typical RRC placements range from 4-12 months, depending on:
* Individual needs assessment
* Available bed space
* Release plan and support system
* Risk and needs factors
* Institutional recommendations
 
The First Step Act requires BOP to consider placement of up to 12 months, representing a change from previous, more limited timeframes.
 
=== Requirements and Restrictions ===
 
Life at an RRC involves significant structure:
 
'''Accountability''': Sign in/out procedures, regular counts, curfews
'''Employment''': Most residents must seek and maintain employment
'''Programming''': May include substance abuse treatment, job readiness, life skills
'''Drug testing''': Regular testing is standard
'''Restricted movement''': Must request and receive approval to leave the facility
'''Subsistence''': Employed residents pay a portion of their income (typically 25%) toward housing costs
 
=== Job Searching and Employment Requirements ===
 
Finding employment is typically mandatory for RRC residents. The job search process includes:
 
* Working with RRC staff to identify opportunities
* Attending job fairs and employment programs
* Applying for positions and attending interviews
* Obtaining employment approval from RRC staff before starting work
 
Once employed, residents must:
* Maintain full-time employment
* Report all earnings
* Pay subsistence (portion of income for housing)
* Follow approved work schedules
 
Employment challenges at this stage include explaining gaps in work history, addressing criminal record questions, and finding employers willing to hire during the transition period.
 
=== Building Foundation for Independence ===
 
The halfway house phase is critical for:
 
'''Saving money''': Despite subsistence payments, employed residents can save for the transition to independent living
 
'''Building employment history''': Establishing a track record of reliable employment
 
'''Reconnecting with family''': Gradual increase in passes and furloughs allows family reunification
 
'''Establishing community ties''': Engaging with support networks, faith communities, and resources
 
'''Addressing practical needs''': Banking, transportation, housing searches
 
For detailed information, see [[Residential Reentry Centers (Halfway Houses)]].
 
== Phase 3: Home Confinement ==
 
=== Eligibility and Selection ===
 
Home confinement allows eligible individuals to serve a portion of their BOP sentence at an approved residence rather than in a secure facility. Eligibility depends on:
 
* Risk assessment scores
* Sentence length and time remaining
* Disciplinary history
* Availability of suitable residence
* Approval of release plan
 
The First Step Act expanded home confinement eligibility, particularly for inmates who earned time credits through programming.
 
=== Rules and Monitoring ===
 
Home confinement involves strict requirements:
 
'''Location monitoring''': GPS ankle monitoring or other electronic supervision
'''Movement restrictions''': Must remain at approved residence except for authorized activities
'''Employment''': Typically required to work or actively seek employment
'''Check-ins''': Regular contact with BOP Residential Reentry Management Office
'''Substance testing''': Random drug and alcohol testing
'''Visitors''': May have restrictions on who can visit the residence
 
=== Still Under BOP Custody ===
 
This point cannot be overemphasized: home confinement under BOP is not supervised release. The individual remains under Bureau of Prisons custody, and violations can result in return to a halfway house or secure facility. The rules and consequences differ from supervised release conditions.
 
=== Transitional Period ===
 
Home confinement serves as a bridge between the structured RRC environment and the relative freedom of supervised release. It allows individuals to:
 
* Live with family
* Maintain employment in the community
* Establish routines and stability
* Demonstrate compliance in a less restrictive setting
 
== Phase 4: Supervised Release ==
 
=== Transition from BOP to U.S. Probation ===
 
When BOP custody ends, supervision transfers to the U.S. Probation Office. This transition involves:
 
'''Reporting''': The individual must report to the probation office in their district, typically within 72 hours of release from BOP custody
 
'''Meeting the probation officer''': Initial meeting to review conditions, establish reporting schedule, and address immediate needs
 
'''Reviewing conditions''': Written statement of all conditions must be provided
 
'''Establishing expectations''': Discussion of supervision approach, communication methods, and requirements
 
=== Meeting Your Probation Officer ===
 
The relationship with your probation officer is important for successful completion of supervised release. At the initial meeting:
 
* Bring all required documentation (ID, employment information, residence verification)
* Be prepared to discuss your release plan, employment, and living situation
* Ask questions about conditions you don't understand
* Establish clear communication expectations
 
=== Conditions and Expectations ===
 
Supervised release involves mandatory conditions (applying to everyone) and standard/special conditions tailored to individual cases. Common requirements include:
 
* Regular reporting to the probation officer
* Maintaining employment
* Remaining in the judicial district
* Submitting to drug testing
* Avoiding criminal activity
* Complying with any treatment requirements
 
For comprehensive information, see [[Supervised Release]].
 
=== Building Toward Independence ===
 
Supervised release is the final phase before complete independence from the criminal justice system. Success involves:
 
* Consistent compliance with all conditions
* Building stable employment and housing
* Developing healthy routines and relationships
* Addressing any underlying issues (substance abuse, mental health)
* Working toward early termination eligibility (after at least one year)
 
== Critical Reentry Tasks ==
 
=== Housing: Securing Stable Housing ===
 
Stable housing is foundational to successful reentry. Challenges include:
 
* Many landlords conduct background checks and deny applicants with criminal records
* Public housing has restrictions for certain offenses
* Housing must be approved by supervising authorities
* Cost barriers, particularly without established income or credit
 
Strategies for finding housing:
* Start planning before release when possible
* Work with reentry organizations that help with housing
* Consider transitional housing programs
* Leverage family and community support networks
* Research landlords with second-chance policies


=== Employment: Job Search Requirements and Challenges ===
<references />


Employment is typically required during both RRC placement and supervised release. Challenges include:
{{DEFAULTSORT:Processes, Overview of Reentry}}
[[Category:Life Inside Federal Prison]]


* Explaining employment gaps
* Background check failures
* Limited job skills or outdated credentials
* Employer reluctance to hire justice-impacted individuals
Resources and strategies:
* Work with reentry employment programs
* Seek out second-chance employers (see [[Employment and Second-Chance Hiring]])
* Consider industries with higher acceptance rates
* Obtain certifications or training during transition
* Utilize the federal bonding program
=== Banking: Opening Accounts ===
Access to banking is essential for:
* Receiving paychecks (many employers require direct deposit)
* Paying rent and bills
* Building credit history
* Managing finances responsibly
Challenges for justice-impacted individuals:
* Some banks conduct background checks and deny accounts
* Prior financial crimes may trigger denials
* ChexSystems issues from pre-incarceration accounts
For detailed information on banking access challenges and solutions, see [[Access to Banking After Incarceration]].
=== Healthcare: Continuity of Care ===
Maintaining healthcare during reentry is critical, particularly for those with chronic conditions or taking medications:
'''Before release:'''
* Obtain copies of medical records
* Get sufficient medication supply for transition period
* Identify healthcare providers in release area
'''After release:'''
* Enroll in health insurance (Medicaid, marketplace, employer-provided)
* Establish care with new providers
* Continue medication regimens without interruption
* Address mental health needs
=== Family Reunification ===
Reconnecting with family is often a priority for returning citizens:
* Gradual reunification during RRC phase through passes and visits
* Navigating changed family dynamics after incarceration
* Addressing custody or visitation issues if applicable
* Managing expectations on all sides
* Accessing family counseling resources if needed
=== Voting Rights Restoration ===
Voting rights for individuals with federal convictions are determined by state law in the state where the individual resides. Rules vary:
* Some states automatically restore voting rights upon release from incarceration
* Others restore rights after completion of supervised release
* Some require additional action to restore rights
Research the specific rules for your state of residence and register to vote once eligible.
== Support Resources ==
=== Federal Reentry Programs ===
'''Federal Reentry Court Programs''': Some districts operate specialized reentry courts that provide intensive supervision and support services
'''BOP Reentry Affairs''': The Bureau of Prisons provides pre-release programming and coordination with community resources
'''U.S. Probation Services''': Probation officers can connect supervisees with local resources and services
=== Nonprofit Organizations ===
Numerous nonprofit organizations support federal reentry:
* Legal aid organizations for record-related issues
* Housing assistance programs
* Employment programs and job training
* Substance abuse treatment
* Mental health services
* Faith-based support networks
Research organizations in your release area before or immediately after release.
=== Community Resources ===
Local resources vary by community but may include:
* Workforce development centers
* Community colleges with reentry programs
* Public library services (internet access, job search resources)
* Social services agencies
* Faith communities
* Peer support groups
== Terminology ==
'''Bureau of Prisons (BOP)''': The federal agency responsible for incarcerating individuals sentenced to federal prison. BOP custody continues through RRC and home confinement.
'''Residential Reentry Center (RRC)''': Community-based facilities (commonly called "halfway houses") where inmates serve the final portion of their sentence while transitioning to the community.
'''Home Confinement''': Serving a portion of the BOP sentence at an approved residence with electronic monitoring, still under BOP custody.
'''Supervised Release''': A term of community supervision following completion of the prison sentence, administered by the U.S. Probation Office.
'''Good Conduct Time''': Credit against a sentence earned through good behavior, up to 54 days per year served.
'''First Step Act Earned Time Credits''': Additional credits earned through participation in recidivism reduction programs under the First Step Act of 2018.
'''Unit Team''': BOP staff (case manager, counselor, unit manager) responsible for an inmate's programming and release planning.
'''Subsistence''': The portion of earnings that RRC residents pay toward their housing costs.
== See Also ==
* [[Residential Reentry Centers (Halfway Houses)]]
* [[Supervised Release]]
* [[Earned Time Credits Under the First Step Act]]
* [[Federal Good Time Credit Policies]]
* [[Employment and Second-Chance Hiring]]
* [[Access to Banking After Incarceration]]
* [[Early Termination of Supervised Release]]
== References ==
* ↑ 18 U.S.C. § 3624, Release of a prisoner.
* ↑ 18 U.S.C. § 3583, Inclusion of a term of supervised release after imprisonment.
* ↑ First Step Act of 2018, Pub. L. No. 115-391.
* ↑ Bureau of Prisons, Program Statement 7310.04, Community Corrections Center Utilization and Transfer Procedure.
* ↑ Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, Overview of Probation and Supervised Release.
* ↑ U.S. Sentencing Commission, Federal Offenders Sentenced to Supervised Release.
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Latest revision as of 13:59, 3 June 2026

Federal prison reentry is the process of moving from Bureau of Prisons custody back to community life. For most people it is not a single event on a release date. It happens in stages. A person may spend the last months of a sentence in a halfway house, then in home confinement, and only after the prison term ends does a separate court-ordered period of supervision begin. Each stage has its own rules, its own supervising authority, and its own consequences for breaking the rules.

The structure matters because the legal status changes at each step. A person living in a halfway house is still serving a prison sentence. A person on supervised release is not. Understanding which stage applies, and who is in charge of it, shapes everything from where someone can sleep to whether a missed appointment sends them back to a secure facility.

Overview

Federal sentences are set by the court at sentencing. The Bureau of Prisons (BOP) then calculates how much of that term a person will actually serve in custody. Two things reduce the time behind bars. The first is good conduct time. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(b), a person can earn up to 54 days per year of good conduct time by avoiding disciplinary problems.[1] The second is First Step Act time credits, described below.

Near the end of a sentence, the BOP can move someone into prerelease custody. That means a community-based setting instead of a prison. The two main forms are a Residential Reentry Center, commonly called a halfway house, and home confinement. Both are still BOP custody. The sentence keeps running. A rule violation in either setting can send a person back to a secure facility.

When the prison term is finished, custody ends. If the sentencing judge ordered a term of supervised release, that term starts now. Supervision shifts from the BOP to a United States Probation Officer attached to the federal district court. Supervised release is a distinct part of the sentence. It is not parole, which the federal system abolished for offenses committed after November 1, 1987.

Reentry also involves practical work that has nothing to do with custody status. People returning to the community need identification, a place to live, income, a bank account, and continued medical care. Much of this is harder for someone with a felony conviction, and the difficulties are often called collateral consequences.

Prerelease Custody (Halfway Houses and Home Confinement)

Prerelease custody is the bridge between a prison cell and the community. The BOP places people into it under two separate legal authorities, and the difference affects how long a placement can last.

The older authority is 18 U.S.C. § 3624(c). It directs the BOP to place a person, to the extent practicable, in conditions that prepare them for reentry during the final portion of the sentence. Under this section, time in a Residential Reentry Center may not exceed 12 months. Home confinement under the same section is capped at the shorter of 10 percent of the sentence or six months.[1]

The newer authority comes from the First Step Act of 2018. It created a system of earned time credits. A person who is eligible and who completes evidence-based recidivism reduction programming or approved productive activities earns 10 days of credit for every 30 days of successful participation. Someone who is assessed at minimum or low risk of recidivism and stays there earns an additional 5 days per 30-day period, for 15 days total.[2][3]

These credits do two things. They can move a person into prerelease custody sooner, and they can move the start of supervised release forward by up to 12 months. The credits do not apply automatically. Several offenses are excluded from earning them, and the BOP will not apply credits until the amount earned matches the time left on the sentence and the person's risk assessment supports it.[2][3]

Residential Reentry Centers

A Residential Reentry Center is a community facility, often run by a contractor, where residents live while transitioning out. Days are structured. Residents sign in and out, are subject to counts and curfews, and submit to drug and alcohol testing. Most residents are required to look for and hold a job. Once working, a resident typically pays subsistence, a portion of earnings put toward the cost of the housing. Leaving the facility, including for work, requires approval.

Not everyone passes through a halfway house. Some people are released straight from the institution, especially on shorter sentences. Some go directly to home confinement. Some are turned over to immigration authorities for removal. Placement depends on the sentence, the available bed space, the release plan, and the person's risk and needs assessment.

Home Confinement

Home confinement lets a person serve part of the BOP term at an approved residence instead of a facility. It is usually monitored, often through GPS or other electronic check-in. The person must stay at the residence except for approved activities such as work, medical appointments, or programming. Employment is generally expected. Contact with the supervising Residential Reentry Management office continues, and drug and alcohol testing is standard.

The point worth repeating is that home confinement under the BOP is not supervised release. The person remains in BOP custody. A violation can mean a return to a halfway house or to a secure prison, and the rules differ from those that govern supervised release.

Supervised Release

Supervised release is a term of court-ordered supervision that follows the prison sentence. The court imposes it at the original sentencing under 18 U.S.C. § 3583. It runs after custody ends, not during it.[4]

When the prison term is complete, oversight passes from the BOP to a United States Probation Officer. The person is generally required to report to the probation office in the district of release within 72 hours. The first meeting covers the conditions of release, the reporting schedule, and immediate needs such as housing and work.

Every term of supervised release carries mandatory conditions set by statute. These include not committing another crime, not unlawfully possessing a controlled substance, submitting to drug testing, and cooperating in the collection of a DNA sample where required. On top of these, courts impose standard conditions, such as reporting to the probation officer, staying within the judicial district without permission, and keeping the officer informed of employment and residence. Courts can also add special conditions tailored to the case, such as mental health or substance abuse treatment, financial disclosures, or restrictions on contact with certain people.[4]

The probation officer's role mixes monitoring and assistance. Officers verify employment and residence, conduct testing, and respond to violations. They also connect people with treatment, job programs, and other services. A violation can lead the court to modify the conditions, extend supervision, or revoke release and impose additional prison time.

A term of supervised release can sometimes end early. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e), a court may terminate supervision after the person has served at least one year, if the conduct of the person and the interest of justice support it.[4]

Reentry Challenges

The legal stages are only part of reentry. The harder part for many people is rebuilding the ordinary infrastructure of a life. The obstacles that follow a conviction are known as collateral consequences, and they reach into housing, work, finances, and civic life.

Identification comes first. Without a state ID, a Social Security card, and often a birth certificate, almost nothing else can move. Many people leave custody without these documents, and replacing them takes time. Some facilities help with applications before release. Starting early matters, because arriving at a halfway house without ID makes finding a job or signing a lease much harder.

Housing is a recurring barrier. Landlords run background checks, and a conviction can mean a denied application. Federal rules let public housing authorities exclude applicants for certain offenses. During prerelease custody, any residence must also be approved by the supervising authority. Transitional housing programs and second-chance landlords exist, but they vary widely by city.

Employment is both a requirement and an obstacle. People in halfway houses and on supervised release are usually expected to work. At the same time, background checks, gaps in work history, and employer reluctance to hire people with records all cut the other way. Ban-the-box laws in some jurisdictions delay when an employer can ask about criminal history, but they do not erase it, and an internet search can surface a case in seconds.

Banking can be its own hurdle. Some banks screen applicants and deny accounts to people with prior financial offenses or with negative records in account-screening databases like ChexSystems. Without an account, receiving a paycheck through direct deposit and paying rent become harder.

Health care continuity matters most for people with chronic conditions or ongoing prescriptions. Getting medical records, a supply of medication for the transition, and enrollment in coverage such as Medicaid or a marketplace plan are tasks that are easier to start before release than after.

Civic consequences round out the list. Voting rights for people with felony convictions are set by the law of the state where they live, and the rules vary. Some states restore the vote upon release from custody, others after supervision ends, and a few require a separate step.

One collateral consequence specific to the modern era is the online record. News coverage, Department of Justice press releases, and court documents on PACER stay searchable for years. An employer or landlord who searches a name can find a case long after the sentence is served. Accurate reporting on a criminal case is protected speech, and government press releases are generally retained for transparency, so the information tends to persist.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What are the stages of federal prison reentry?

For most people, reentry moves through prerelease custody and then supervised release. Prerelease custody can include a Residential Reentry Center (halfway house) and home confinement, both of which are still Bureau of Prisons custody. After the prison term ends, any court-ordered term of supervised release begins under a United States Probation Officer.


Q: Is a halfway house still part of a prison sentence?

Yes. A person in a Residential Reentry Center or on home confinement under the Bureau of Prisons is still serving the prison sentence. The sentence keeps running, and a rule violation can result in a return to a secure facility. Supervised release does not begin until BOP custody ends.


Q: How long can a person stay in a federal halfway house?

Under 18 U.S.C. § 3624(c), placement in a Residential Reentry Center may not exceed 12 months. Home confinement under the same section is limited to the shorter of 10 percent of the sentence or six months. First Step Act time credits can affect when prerelease custody begins.


Q: What are First Step Act time credits?

They are credits an eligible person can earn by completing recidivism reduction programming or approved activities. A person earns 10 days of credit for every 30 days of successful participation, and 15 days per 30 days if assessed and maintained at minimum or low recidivism risk. The credits can move someone into prerelease custody sooner or move the start of supervised release forward by up to 12 months.


Q: What is the difference between home confinement and supervised release?

Home confinement under the Bureau of Prisons is part of the prison sentence and is supervised by the BOP. Supervised release is a separate term ordered by the sentencing court that begins after the prison term ends and is supervised by a United States Probation Officer. The rules and the consequences of a violation differ between the two.


Q: Can supervised release end early?

Sometimes. Under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e), a court may terminate supervised release after a person has served at least one year, if the person's conduct and the interest of justice support it.


Q: Will a federal case still appear in online searches after release?

Often, yes. Department of Justice press releases, news coverage, and court records on PACER can remain searchable for years. Accurate reporting on a criminal case is protected speech, and government press releases are generally kept for transparency, so the information tends to persist after a sentence is served.


References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "18 U.S. Code § 3624 - Release of a prisoner". Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "First Step Act Earned Time Credits". United States Sentencing Commission. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "An Overview of the First Step Act". Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "18 U.S. Code § 3583 - Inclusion of a term of supervised release after imprisonment". Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School. Retrieved 2026-06-03.