Step 1: Bail Is Set
A judge or magistrate sets bail soon after an arrest, usually within a day. Bail is the full amount the court holds to guarantee the defendant returns for trial. The judge weighs the charge, any prior record, and whether the person is a flight risk. That dollar figure becomes the number a bondsman works from when your family calls for help.
Step 2: You Contact a Bondsman
Once bail is set, the family reaches out to a licensed Texas bondsman, day or night. The bondsman charges a fee instead of the full bail. By Texas custom, that fee is a set percentage of the bail, often around ten percent. On a $10,000 bail, that is roughly $1,000 paid to the bondsman. Many offices arrange payment plans so the fee stays workable.
Step 3: The Bond Is Posted
After the paperwork and fee are handled, the bondsman posts the bond at the jail. This pledges the full bail amount to the court on the defendant’s behalf. The jail then begins the release process, which can take a few hours depending on the facility and how busy it is. Your loved one goes home and waits for court from there, not from a cell.
Step 4: Court Dates and the End of the Bond
The bond stays active for the whole case. The defendant must appear at every scheduled court date. Miss one, and the court can forfeit the bond and issue a warrant. When the case ends and all appearances are met, the court exonerates the bond and the bondsman is released from the obligation. The fee paid stays with the bondsman as the cost of the service.