Community Order vs Custodial Sentence
A community order (Criminal Justice Act 2003 s.177) requires an offender to complete requirements in the community. A custodial sentence (immediate or suspended) is imprisonment. This comparison explains the sentencing threshold, available requirements, and when each is appropriate under the CJA 2003.
Overview
English sentencing law follows a clear hierarchy: a community order is more severe than a fine but less severe than custody. The Criminal Justice Act 2003 (CJA 2003) governs both disposals. A community order under CJA 2003 s.177 consists of one or more requirements โ such as unpaid work, rehabilitation activity, curfew, or programme requirements โ and can last up to 3 years. Sentencing courts must follow the Sentencing Council's definitive guidelines for each offence, which indicate at what level of seriousness each disposal becomes appropriate. Custodial sentences are governed by CJA 2003 s.152, which provides that a court must not pass a custodial sentence unless it is of the opinion that the offence (or combination of offences) was so serious that neither a fine nor a community sentence can be justified โ the so-called custody threshold. Where a custodial sentence is passed, the court must consider whether it can be suspended under CJA 2003 s.189. A suspended sentence order (SSO) operates like a community order: requirements are attached, and if they are breached (or the offender reoffends) the custodial term is typically activated.
Side-by-Side Comparison
Community Order
Pros
- Allows the offender to remain in the community โ maintaining employment, family relationships, and housing
- Highly flexible: requirements can be tailored to the offence and the offender's rehabilitation needs
- Rehabilitation activity requirements and programme requirements address the root causes of offending
- Less likely to result in loss of accommodation, employment, or family contact than an immediate custodial sentence
Cons
- Requires active compliance โ breach proceedings under CJA 2003 Sch.8 can result in resentencing and custody
- Not available for the most serious offences where the custody threshold is clearly passed
- Some victims and the public may perceive community orders as insufficiently punitive for serious offences
Best For
Offences below the custody threshold; first or early offenders; cases where rehabilitation is the primary sentencing objective; offenders with good prospects for rehabilitation and community ties to preserve.
Custodial Sentence
Pros
- Appropriate for the most serious offences where only custody can reflect the seriousness of the offending or protect the public
- A suspended sentence order (SSO) allows the punitive element of custody to be imposed while enabling community requirements and rehabilitation
- Custodial sentences satisfy the punishment and public protection sentencing objectives for serious offending
- Determinate sentences allow planning for release and resettlement
Cons
- Immediate custody severs community ties โ risks loss of employment, accommodation, and family relationships
- Short custodial sentences (under 12 months) are widely regarded as ineffective for rehabilitation
- Reoffending rates for short custodial sentences are high โ the Prison Reform Trust consistently reports 60%+ one-year reoffending rates
Best For
Offences that cross the custody threshold under CJA 2003 s.152; cases involving serious violence, sexual offending, substantial dishonesty, or public protection concerns; cases where a suspended sentence can deliver the custodial element while preserving rehabilitation.
Key Differences
Our Recommendation
Courts must first assess whether the custody threshold is passed under CJA 2003 s.152. If it is not, a community order is the appropriate disposal. If it is, the court must consider whether the custodial term can be suspended under s.189 before imposing immediate custody. Sentencing guidelines published by the Sentencing Council are binding on all courts and provide the structured framework for these decisions.