Institutional jail release forecasting. Solve for premium rates, state-specific schedules, and non-refundable bond fees.
STATE SYNC
2026 Schedule Active
| Charge | Avg Bail |
|---|---|
| misdemeanor | $2,500 |
| dui | $10,000 |
| felony | $50,000 |
| violentFelony | $150,000 |
| State | Premium |
|---|---|
| California | 10% |
| Texas | 10% |
| Florida | 10% |
| New York | 10% |
| Layer | Audit |
|---|---|
| Non-Refundable Fee | Premium |
| Cash Bail Deposit | 100% Refundable |
| Audit Version | S-Class v2.6 |
Jail release costs are governed by **State Statutory Protocols**. Our engine audits cost structures based on active state schedules, offense severity multipliers, and current 2026 industry benchmarks.
Forced audit of non-refundable agent fees
Sync with active state cash bail reform
2026 state-specific underwriting roadmap
"Calibrated against 2026 state bail schedules, Department of Justice pretrial data, and national bail bond industry loss ratios."
A: The standard bail bond premium is 10% of the total bail amount. For a $10,000 bail, you will pay a non-refundable $1,000 fee to the bondsman. Some states regulate these rates strictly, while others allow for slight variations based on the offense and defendant risk.
A: If you pay 'cash bail' directly to the court, it is 100% refundable (less minor administrative fees) once the case concludes, regardless of the outcome. If you use a bondsman, the 10% premium fee is non-refundable, as it is the bondsman's payment for the risk and service.
A: If the defendant fails to appear, the bail is forfeited to the court. If a bondsman was used, they will likely employ a fugitive recovery agent (bounty hunter) to return the defendant to custody to avoid losing the full bail amount to the court.
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