Applying for Bail in Criminal Proceedings
How bail is granted or refused at different stages of criminal proceedings and what to do if your bail application is refused.
Overview
Bail is the conditional release of a defendant from custody while criminal proceedings are ongoing. Under the Bail Act 1976, there is a general right to bail for defendants accused of imprisonable offences — meaning the court must grant bail unless it is satisfied that one or more of the statutory grounds for refusing bail are made out. The prosecution bears the burden of persuading the court to refuse bail. Key grounds for refusal include: substantial grounds to believe the defendant will fail to surrender, commit offences on bail, or interfere with witnesses. Bail conditions can be attached to manage risk without full remand. If bail is refused at the magistrates' court, you can apply to the Crown Court.
Who Can Use This Process
- You are likely eligible to use this guide if your situation involves bail in criminal proceedings.
- You have a genuine legal basis for the matter (contract, tort, statutory right, etc.).
- You have made reasonable attempts to resolve the matter directly with the other party first.
Step-by-Step Process
First Appearance — Police Bail or Court Bail
Bail may first arise at the police station after charge (pre-charge bail under the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022 is also possible). At the first court hearing (usually a magistrates' court), the prosecution will either consent to bail (sometimes with conditions) or oppose it. Your solicitor will make a bail application setting out why you should be released, countering any objections raised by the prosecution.
- Exercise your right to free legal advice at the police station — a duty solicitor can advise on bail conditions before charge
- Pre-charge bail (bail while the CPS makes a charging decision) is now limited to an initial period of 28 days, extendable in certain circumstances
- The prosecution must identify specific grounds for objecting to bail — a general 'risk' assertion is insufficient
- Preparation matters: having a fixed address, evidence of employment or community ties, and a surety all strengthen a bail application
The Bail Hearing at the Magistrates' Court
At the bail hearing, your solicitor will address each ground raised by the prosecution under Schedule 1 to the Bail Act 1976. For each ground (e.g., failure to surrender), they will argue why that ground is not made out on the specific facts. Offering bail conditions — such as a curfew, residence requirement, reporting to a police station, surrender of passport, or electronic tag — can counter prosecution objections. The magistrates (or District Judge) will then decide.
- A surety is a person who agrees to pay a sum of money to the court if you fail to surrender — having a surety can tip the balance in a contested hearing
- A 'security' (money deposited with the court) is different from a surety
- The court can attach almost any condition it considers necessary — conditions must be proportionate
- If the court refuses bail, ask your solicitor to request a 'full argument' certificate, which allows an immediate Crown Court bail application
Crown Court Bail Application
If the magistrates' court refuses bail (or grants it with conditions you wish to challenge), you can apply to the Crown Court for bail under section 81 of the Senior Courts Act 1981. The application is heard by a Crown Court Judge, usually at a dedicated bail hearing. New arguments or changed circumstances are particularly persuasive — bringing fresh evidence of accommodation, employment, or family support can make a significant difference.
- Instruct a solicitor as quickly as possible — Crown Court bail applications need to be prepared carefully
- The Crown Court application is not a 'rubber stamp' of the magistrates' decision — the judge considers the matter afresh
- You can only make two applications to the magistrates' court; after two refusals, you must go to the Crown Court or wait for a 'change of circumstances'
- Consider whether tagging, MAPPA management, or other measures can address the court's concerns
Complying With Bail Conditions
If bail is granted with conditions, you must comply with every condition precisely. Common conditions include: reporting to a named police station on specified days at specified times, residing at a specified address, not contacting named individuals (especially prosecution witnesses), surrendering your passport, observing a curfew, or wearing an electronic monitoring tag. Breach of any condition is a criminal offence under section 6 of the Bail Act 1976.
- If you cannot comply with a condition (e.g., you need to move address), apply to the court to vary it immediately — do not simply breach it
- Keep a diary record of all reporting attendances, with times
- Contact your solicitor immediately if the police suggest you have breached a condition
- Bail conditions can be varied at any subsequent court hearing — they are not fixed for the duration of proceedings
Breach of Bail and Consequences
If you fail to surrender to custody at the appointed time and place without reasonable cause, this is an offence under section 6 of the Bail Act 1976 (failure to surrender) and is prosecuted separately. The court will issue a warrant for your arrest. When you surrender (or are arrested), the court will hold a hearing on the failure-to-surrender. If convicted of the offence, a sentence can be imposed in addition to any sentence for the main offence. Failure to surrender is also a factor courts consider when deciding future bail applications.
- If you have a genuine reason for being late or unable to attend, contact your solicitor immediately
- Voluntarily surrendering is far better than being arrested — it may mitigate the failure-to-surrender offence
- Breach of a bail condition (other than surrender) does not automatically mean remand — but a court can revoke bail and remand you in custody
Costs
Important Warnings
Failure to surrender to bail is a criminal offence prosecuted separately from the main offence. If you are going to be late, call your solicitor immediately.
Breaching a bail condition (other than surrender) is not itself a criminal offence, but the police can arrest you and bring you before the court, which can then remand you in custody.
Do not contact prosecution witnesses even if you believe the contact is innocent — this will almost certainly result in remand.
Pre-charge bail conditions (imposed by the police before charge) are enforceable in the same way as court bail conditions.
Useful Links
Frequently asked questions
- How long does the applying for bail in criminal proceedings process take?
- The end-to-end timeline depends on which stage you're at. Common steps run on these timeframes: "First appearance usually within 24 hours of charge (or by 9am the next day)"; "Decision made at the hearing"; "Crown Court bail hearings are usually listed within 2–5 days"; "Ongoing throughout proceedings". Add court / counterparty response time on top — disputed matters can run months longer than the bare minimum.
- How much does it cost?
- Main outlays are: Duty solicitor at court (first hearing) — Free; Legal aid — ongoing criminal proceedings — Free if means and merits test met; Private solicitor (bail application) — £500–£2,000 depending on complexity; Surety (amount deposited if conditions not met) — Set by the court — can range from £500 to £50,000+. Court fees often qualify for Help with Fees remission if you're on a low income. Solicitor fees are extra and vary widely — many matters can be done as a litigant in person.
- What are the most common mistakes to avoid?
- Watch out for: Failure to surrender to bail is a criminal offence prosecuted separately from the main offence. If you are going to be late, call your solicitor immediately.; Breaching a bail condition (other than surrender) is not itself a criminal offence, but the police can arrest you and bring you before the court, which can then remand you in custody.; Do not contact prosecution witnesses even if you believe the contact is innocent — this will almost certainly result in remand.. If you're unsure on any of these, get advice from a regulated solicitor or a free service like Citizens Advice before acting.
- Where can I find the official forms and guidance?
- The official sources are: Bail Act 1976; GOV.UK: Bail Rights; The Howard League: Remand. Always use the forms / guidance from the issuing authority's own site — third-party copies can be out of date.
- Can I do this myself without a solicitor?
- Yes — many people complete this kind of matter as a litigant in person. The site walks through each step in plain English. A solicitor is recommended if: large sums are at stake, the other side has legal representation, the matter involves criminal liability, children, immigration, or you're unsure on any procedural deadline. Free advice is available from Citizens Advice, Law Centres, and (for some matters) LawWorks pro bono clinics.
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