Why Families Trust Us With a Cash Bond
A cash bond ties up a lot of money, so it is worth understanding before you pay. We explain the trade-offs honestly, and from your first call, you can count on steady help.
From the moment you call, we keep you informed. You will know the full bail amount, what the court requires, and when your loved one can be released, with no guessing.
Whether you choose a cash or surety bond, we handle the forms and the calls to the jail. You should not have to face the paperwork alone during an arrest.
An arrest does not define anyone, and we never treat you like it does. You and your loved one are met with respect and patience, never judgment, from the first call to release.
Call us and a real licensed bondsman answers, not a machine. Day or night, weekends and holidays, someone is ready to explain your bond options the moment you reach us.
Arrests happen at every hour, and so do we. A licensed bondsman answers your call day or night, on weekends and holidays, ready to start the bond right away.
How a Cash Bond Works
A cash bond is straightforward, but the details matter before you hand over the full bail. This is how a cash bond works in Texas, in plain terms.
A cash bond means placing the full bail amount with the court, in cash, to guarantee the defendant appears at every hearing. The court holds the money until the case is finished, then returns it to you.
Unlike a surety bond, a cash bond requires the entire bail amount up front. On a ten thousand dollar bail, you pay the court ten thousand dollars, not a smaller premium. That money is tied up until the case ends.
If the defendant attends every court date, the court refunds the cash bond when the case ends, sometimes minus small fees. If they miss court, the money can be forfeited, so making every court date matters.
With a surety bond, you pay a bondsman a premium instead of the full bail. A cash bond ties up far more money, which is why most families choose a surety bond over a cash one.
A cash bond can make sense when the bail is low, you have the full amount available, and you expect the money back. For most larger bails, a surety bond is the practical choice for families.
Even with a cash bond, we can guide you through posting it correctly at the right jail or court. If the full amount is out of reach, we explain the surety option in plain terms too.
Most families choose a surety bond instead. See our surety bonds and felony bail bonds.
Three Simple Steps to a Bail Bond
After bail is set, you pay either the premium for a surety bond or the full amount for a cash bond, to start the release. We explain the cost clearly before anything is signed.
If you choose a surety bond, we build a payment plan that fits your budget. Flexible options and low down payments mean that cost should never keep your loved one in jail.
Our agents present the court with the full bond amount and handle the paperwork directly with the jail, securing your loved one’s release as quickly as the facility allows.
Areas We Serve
We help with cash and surety bonds across the entire Houston metro, from Harris County to the surrounding counties. Wherever the arrest happened, a licensed bondsman can help.
Nearby areas we cover: Harris County · Medical Center · Rice Village
Houston Jail & Court Directory
A cash bond is posted at the jail or court holding the defendant. These are the jails and courts across Greater Houston, with addresses, phones, and directions for each.
| Type | Facility & address | Phone | Map |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jail | Harris County Joint Processing Center — 700 N San Jacinto St, Houston, TX 77002 | (713) 755-5300 | Directions |
| Jail | Harris County Jail (1200 Baker St) — 1200 Baker St, Houston, TX 77002 | (713) 755-5300 | Directions |
| Court | Harris County Criminal Justice Center — 1201 Franklin St, Houston, TX 77002 | (713) 755-5800 | Directions |
| Court | Harris County Civil Courthouse — 201 Caroline St, Houston, TX 77002 | (713) 274-1330 | Directions |
| Type | Facility & address | Phone | Map |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jail | Fort Bend County Jail — 1410 Richmond Pkwy, Richmond, TX 77469 | (281) 341-4735 | Directions |
| Court | Fort Bend County Justice Center — 1422 Eugene Heimann Cir, Richmond, TX 77469 | (281) 341-3742 | Directions |
| Jail | Sugar Land Police Detention Center — 1200 TX-6, Sugar Land, TX 77478 | (281) 275-2525 | Directions |
| Court | Sugar Land Municipal Court — 1200 TX-6, Sugar Land, TX 77478 | (281) 275-2560 | Directions |
| Jail | Missouri City Police Jail — 3849 Cartwright Rd, Missouri City, TX 77459 | (281) 403-8700 | Directions |
| Court | Missouri City Municipal Court — 3845 Cartwright Rd, Missouri City, TX 77459 | (281) 403-8669 | Directions |
| Jail | Richmond City Jail — 600 Preston St, Richmond, TX 77469 | (281) 342-2849 | Directions |
| Court | Richmond Municipal Court — 600 Morton St, Richmond, TX 77469 | (281) 342-0578 | Directions |
| Jail | Rosenberg Police Jail — 2120 4th St, Rosenberg, TX 77471 | (832) 595-3700 | Directions |
| Court | Rosenberg Municipal Court — 2110 4th St, Rosenberg, TX 77471 | (832) 595-3450 | Directions |
| Type | Facility & address | Phone | Map |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jail | Montgomery County Jail — 1 Criminal Justice Dr, Conroe, TX 77301 | (936) 760-5800 | Directions |
| Court | Montgomery County Courthouse — 301 N Main St, Conroe, TX 77301 | (936) 756-0571 | Directions |
| Jail | Conroe City Jail — 2300 Plantation Dr, Conroe, TX 77303 | (936) 522-3200 | Directions |
| Court | Conroe Municipal Court — 2300 Plantation Dr, Conroe, TX 77303 | (936) 522-3380 | Directions |
| Court | The Woodlands Courthouse — 1520 Lake Front Cir, The Woodlands, TX 77380 | (281) 292-3325 | Directions |
| Type | Facility & address | Phone | Map |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jail | Galveston County Jail — 5700 Avenue H, Galveston, TX 77551 | (409) 766-2315 | Directions |
| Court | Galveston County Justice Center — 600 59th St, Galveston, TX 77551 | (409) 770-5230 | Directions |
| Jail | League City Jail — 555 W Walker St, League City, TX 77573 | (281) 338-8222 | Directions |
| Court | League City Municipal Court — 200 W Walker St, League City, TX 77573 | (281) 554-1060 | Directions |
| Type | Facility & address | Phone | Map |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jail | Brazoria County Detention Center — 3602 County Road 45, Angleton, TX 77515 | (979) 864-2336 | Directions |
| Court | Brazoria County Courthouse — 111 E Locust St, Angleton, TX 77515 | (979) 849-5711 | Directions |
| Jail | Pearland City Jail — 2555 Cullen Pkwy, Pearland, TX 77581 | (281) 997-5830 | Directions |
| Court | Pearland Municipal Court — 2555 Cullen Pkwy, Pearland, TX 77581 | (281) 997-5900 | Directions |
Cash Bond FAQ
Cash bonds raise practical questions about cost, refunds, and how they compare to surety. These are the ones Houston families ask us most. Call anytime for free, straight answers.
You place the full bail amount, in cash, with the court to guarantee the defendant appears. The court holds it through the case. If every court date is made, the money is refunded, sometimes minus small fees, when the case ends.
It is a way to get someone released by paying the court the full bail in cash, instead of using a bondsman. The defendant is released, and the money is returned when the case ends if all court dates are kept.
It depends on the court, but refunds usually come weeks or even months after the case ends. The court processes it once the case is fully closed. This delay is one reason many families prefer a surety bond over cash.
Not really. A cash bond requires the full bail up front, while a surety bond costs only a premium. You may get the cash back later, but it ties up far more money in the meantime than a surety bond.
At the jail or court holding the defendant. The Harris County Sheriff accepts cash or surety bonds at 700 North San Jacinto downtown, and municipal courts take cash bonds too. We can guide you to the right place for it.
Not sure where they are held? Search the Harris County inmate roster.