Probation vs. Incarceration Cost Comparator

Compare the total taxpayer cost of supervising an individual on probation versus incarcerating them, based on sentence length and jurisdiction-specific daily rates.

National average ≈ $110/day (state prison). Enter your jurisdiction's figure.
National average ≈ $10.50/day. Enter your jurisdiction's figure.
Fees offset government cost. Enter 0 if unknown or not applicable.

Formulas Used

Total Days = Months × 30.4375  (365.25 ÷ 12)

Gross Incarceration Cost = Daily Incarceration Rate × Total Days

Gross Probation Cost (govt.) = Daily Probation Rate × Total Days

Fee Offset = Monthly Supervision Fee × Months

Net Probation Cost (govt.) = max(0, Gross Probation Cost − Fee Offset)

Savings (Probation vs. Incarceration) = Gross Incarceration Cost − Net Probation Cost

Cost Ratio = Gross Incarceration Cost ÷ Net Probation Cost

Aggregate Cost = Per-Person Cost × Number of People

Assumptions & References

  • Default daily incarceration cost of $110/day is based on the Vera Institute of Justice (2023) national average for state prisons (~$40,150/year).
  • Default daily probation cost of $10.50/day (~$3,800/year) reflects the Bureau of Justice Statistics and Pew Charitable Trusts estimates for community supervision.
  • A calendar month is treated as 30.4375 days (365.25 ÷ 12) to account for leap years.
  • Supervision fees paid by the probationer directly offset the government's net cost; the calculator caps net probation cost at $0 (fees cannot produce a negative government cost).
  • Costs shown are direct operational costs only. Excluded: capital/construction costs, healthcare, mental health treatment, reentry services, victim services, and lost tax revenue.
  • Actual costs vary significantly by state, county, facility type (jail vs. state prison vs. federal), and supervision intensity (standard vs. intensive probation).
  • Sources: Vera Institute of Justice — The Price of Prisons (2023); Pew Charitable Trusts — Probation and Parole Systems Marked by High Stakes, Missed Opportunities (2018); Bureau of Justice Statistics — Probation and Parole in the United States (2022).

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