Making Bail in Raleigh: Costs by Charge Type | Wake County NC
When you get that phone call from the Wake County
Detention Center, everything speeds up at once, your heart, your thoughts, and
the questions you need answered right now. One of the first questions most
families in Raleigh ask is simple: “How much is this going to cost to get them
out?”
Here’s the part that trips people up: the “bail
amount” set by the court is not the same thing as the “bail bond cost” you pay
a bondsman. In Wake County, the charge type matters, but it’s only one piece of
the puzzle. Judges and magistrates also look at safety, flight risk, criminal
history, and whether the person has missed court before.
This guide breaks down what bail means in
Raleigh, how bail is set under North Carolina law, and how to estimate the real
out-of-pocket cost, without guessing, and without relying on “average bail”
numbers that may not apply to your situation.
Bail in Wake County,
explained in plain language
Bail
(also called “bond”) is a promise tied to money or security. The court allows
someone to leave jail while their case is pending, and the bail amount is the
financial “backstop” meant to help ensure they return to court.
North Carolina law recognizes several ways a bail
bond can be structured, including:
- Unsecured
(a written promise to pay if the person doesn’t show)
- Premium-secured
(the kind used with a bail bondsman)
- Secured
by cash (a full cash deposit)
- Secured
by a mortgage (property)
- Secured
by at least one surety (a bondsman or other solvent surety)
Who sets bail
in Raleigh, and what do they consider?
In Wake County, bail conditions are typically set
early by a judicial official (often a magistrate), and in certain serious
situations by a judge. The law requires the official to pick at least one of
five options:
- Written
promise to appear
- Unsecured
bond
- Custody
release (released to a person/organization supervising)
- Secured
bond (cash, mortgage, or surety)
- House
arrest with electronic monitoring (and a secured bond)
The two
numbers you need to know: bail amount vs. bailbond cost
1) The bail amount
(set by the court)
This is the full number listed on the release
order. If it’s a secured bond, the court is requiring real security: cash,
property, or a surety.
2) The bail bond
cost (paid to a bondsman)
If you use a licensed North Carolina bail bondsman,
you typically pay a premium to the bondsman. In North Carolina, the premium on
a bail bond cannot exceed 15% of the face amount of the bond.
That “15% cap” is the most reliable cost estimate
you can use, because it’s tied to the bond amount and set by statute.
In Raleigh, a lot of people say “bail” when they
mean “bond.” Taking a minute to understand the difference
between bail and bond can save you time, money, and stress when you’re
trying to get someone released.
Quick cost estimator for
Raleigh families (based on the 15% cap)
Below are examples showing how the premium works when a
secured bond is set. (These are not “average bonds,” just easy math so you can
plan.)
- Bond
$1,000 → premium up to $150
- Bond
$2,500 → premium up to $375
- Bond
$5,000 → premium up to $750
- Bond
$10,000 → premium up to $1,500
- Bond
$25,000 → premium up to $3,750
- Bond
$50,000 → premium up to $7,500
A few details families should understand up front:
·
Premium is generally non-refundable.
·
If the bond gets reduced later after you
already entered the agreement, the surety is not required
to return any portion of the premium just because the bond
amount went down.
·
A bondsman may accept collateral,
but it must be reasonable, and the law requires collateral to be returned
within 15
days after final termination of liability on the bond.
Collateral in
Wake County: what it is and what the law requires
Collateral is property
or an asset you offer to help secure the bond agreement—often used when the
bond amount is high or the case is complex. In plain terms, bail bond
collateral is the safety net a bondsman may require so they’re not left
holding the bag if the defendant disappears.
A few legal
protections in North Carolina are worth knowing:
·
If collateral is taken, it must be reasonable in relation
to the bond amount and must be returned within 15 days after
the bond liability ends.
·
If a bondsman receives collateral in the form of cash or a
negotiable instrument, they must deposit it within two banking
days into a separate non-interest-bearing trust account, and the funds
cannot be commingled with operating funds.
Why some
charges in Raleigh lead to “no bond” at first
Some serious
charges require a higher level of review. North Carolina law lists offenses
where a judge decides, in their
discretion, whether the person may be released before trial. That list
includes (among others) first- or second-degree murder, certain serious sex
offenses, kidnapping, robbery with a dangerous weapon, first-degree burglary,
and first-degree arson.
So in Wake
County you may hear:
·
“They’re being held for a judge,” or
·
“No bond has been set yet.”
How costs
change by charge type in Wake County
Because Wake County bond amounts are set
case-by-case under the statutory factors, there isn’t a single reliable
“average bail by crime type” that applies to everyone. The better way to think
about it is:
Charge type influences the risk assessment. Risk
assessment influences whether release is unsecured or secured, and if secured,
how high the secured amount is.
Below are common charge categories and what
typically pushes the cost up or down in Raleigh-area cases.
Low-level misdemeanors
(minor non-violent charges)
For many non-violent misdemeanors, the court may use:
- A
written promise to appear, or
- An
unsecured bond, or
- A
small secured bond.
Cost impact:
- If
release is on a written promise or unsecured bond, families may pay $0 to
the court to secure release (though other conditions may apply).
- If
a secured bond is set, the bail bond cost is still calculated the same
way: up to 15% of the bond amount.
DWI /
impaired driving arrests in Raleigh
Impaired driving cases can vary widely depending on facts like
prior convictions, whether there was a crash or injury, and whether there are
additional charges involved.
Cost impact:
- Costs
rise when the secured bond rises. There’s no special “DWI math”—the
premium is tied to the bond face amount (up to 15%).
Domestic
violence-related charges and protective order violations
These cases often come with extra conditions beyond the money
number, such as no-contact orders and restrictions on where the person can go.
Cost impact:
- When
the court believes safety is an issue, it may move away from unsecured
release and toward a secured bond, or impose stricter conditions.
Drug possession
vs. drug trafficking
Two cases can both involve “drugs” and still have very different
bond expectations. For example, North Carolina law creates a rebuttable
presumption against release in certain trafficking scenarios,
especially when trafficking is alleged and other statutory factors are met.
Cost impact:
- When
a case is treated as higher risk, it often means a higher secured bond or
a judge-only decision on release, which changes the real cost fast.
Property
crimes (larceny, breaking and entering, fraud)
These cases often turn on whether the person has prior similar
convictions, whether the allegations show repeated behavior, and whether there
is concern about continued offenses while out.
Cost impact:
- The
premium formula still doesn’t change: up to 15% of
whatever secured bond is set.
Violent
felonies and weapons-related charges
When the allegation involves serious injury, a weapon, or conduct
the court views as an immediate safety risk, it’s more common to see the court
move toward a secured bond (or stricter conditions), because
the law allows the judicial official to require a secured bond when less
restrictive conditions won’t reasonably assure appearance or public safety.
In addition, North Carolina law includes special rules and
presumptions in certain high-risk situations (including some firearm and
trafficking scenarios), which can mean a judge is the only person who can
authorize release after making specific findings.
Cost impact:
- The
“math” still stays the same (bond × up to 15%), but these are the
categories where the bond amount itself is more likely to
be high, so families feel the cost immediately.
The “missed
court before” penalty that families don’t expect
One of the fastest ways bond can jump—sometimes even on a
relatively small charge, is a history of failing to appear.
North Carolina law says that when conditions of pretrial release
are set for someone who has failed to appear before, the judicial official must
at minimum impose conditions recommended in the most recent order for arrest.
If no conditions were recommended, the official must require a secured
bond at least double the most recent bond (or at least $1,000 if no
bond was previously required).
That’s one reason two people with the “same charge” can have two
very different bond outcomes in Wake County.
Paying the
court directly vs. using a bondsman in Wake County
Families generally have three broad options when a secured bond is
set:
Option A: Pay
the full cash deposit to the court
If you have the full amount available, you may be able to post the
full cash deposit required by the secured bond.
A big tip: who gets the money back can depend on
how the appearance bond paperwork is completed. Guidance from the UNC School of
Government explains that forms (including AOC-CR-201) help determine whether
cash is treated as the defendant’s or a third party’s, and that affects who is
entitled to a refund when the case ends.
Option B: Use
property (if allowed and approved)
In North Carolina, a secured bond can be satisfied by a mortgage
in some situations.
Property bonds can take longer than families expect, so timing matters.
Option C: Use
a licensed bail bondsman (surety bond)
This is common when the secured amount is more than a family can
pay in cash. You pay the premium (up to 15%), and the bondsman posts the surety
bond.
When premium
can (and cannot) be returned in North Carolina
If the surety surrenders the defendant before there has
been a breach of the bond, the law says “the full premium shall be
returned within 72 hours after the surrender.”
But the law also lists situations where the defendant may be
surrendered without the return of premium, like willfully
failing to pay, changing address without notifying the surety, hiding, leaving
the state without permission, violating a court order, or providing false
information.
A
step-by-step plan for Raleigh families after an arrest
1.
Get identifying info (full legal name, date of birth,
booking number if available)
2.
Confirm charges (some serious charges require
judge review for release)
3.
Confirm the bond type (written promise, unsecured, or
secured)
4.
Estimate premium if using a bondsman (bond × 0.15
for the maximum)
5.
Calendar court dates immediately (missing court can trigger
higher bonds later)
Wake County
help, from a Raleigh team that does this every day
Amistad Bail Bonds is based here in Raleigh and serves Wake County
24/7. If your loved one has been arrested and you need help understanding the
bond amount, the bond type, and what it will realistically cost to secure
release, our team can walk you through it step-by-step.
If you’re searching for Raleigh bail bonds or Wake
County bail bonds, call us as soon as you can at (919) 790-6887. The faster you have the
right information, the faster you can make the best decision for your family.
FAQs
How much does a bail bond cost in
Raleigh, NC?
In North Carolina, the premium a bail bondsman can charge is capped at 15%
of the face amount of the bond.
Can someone be released in Wake
County without paying money?
Yes. North Carolina law allows release on a written promise to appear or an
unsecured bond in appropriate cases.
Who sets bond in Wake County, magistrate
or judge?
Often a magistrate sets conditions early, but state law requires a judge to
decide release for certain serious charges.
If I pay a cash bond for someone,
will I automatically get the money back?
Not always. Who is entitled to the refund can depend on how the appearance bond
paperwork is completed.
Is the bail bond premium
refundable if the bond is reduced later?
North Carolina law says a surety is not required to return premium just because
a bond is reduced after an agreement is made.
When does collateral have to be
returned in North Carolina?
State law requires collateral to be returned within 15 days after final
termination of liability on the bond.
Can premium ever be returned if a
bondsman surrenders the defendant?
Yes, if surrender happens before breach, the law says the full premium shall be
returned within 72 hours, but there are listed exceptions.
This Blog is re-published with permission.
Original Source: https://www.amistadbailbonds.com/post/making-bail-average-cost-by-crime-type

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