What Happens When You Violate a Bond Condition in Texas?
Getting out on bond isn’t the end of the story, it comes with strings attached, and those strings matter. Under Article 17.40 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, a judge can attach conditions to your release that are meant to protect an alleged victim or the broader community. Break one of those conditions, and the fallout can move fast: a judge can revoke your bond on the spot, issue a warrant, and send you straight back into custody. In certain situations, particularly protective order violations, you could also be staring down brand new criminal charges layered on top of whatever case you were already fighting.
What Actually Happens If You Violate Your Bond
Your bond can be revoked. Once a judge finds, by a preponderance of the evidence, that you violated a condition, revocation isn’t really optional, the law requires it. That means going back to jail and staying there until trial, unless the court later agrees to set a new bond, which isn’t guaranteed.
A warrant gets issued. There’s no warning call. The moment a violation is reported, a warrant can be issued for your arrest, and that warrant doesn’t discriminate. A routine traffic stop can turn into an arrest if your name comes back flagged.
Your bond amount can climb, or new restrictions get added. Sometimes a judge won’t revoke bond outright but will respond by doubling the amount or tacking on tighter conditions, more frequent check-ins, electronic monitoring, whatever the judge thinks will keep you in line going forward.
You could face entirely new charges. This is where things get serious fast. If the violation involves a protective order, common in domestic violence cases, you’re not just looking at a bond problem anymore. Under Penal Code Section 25.07, that can mean a fresh Class A misdemeanor charge, and depending on the circumstances, it can escalate all the way to a felony.
The Conditions You're Expected to Follow
Bond conditions vary case by case, but a few show up again and again:
No-contact orders. Staying away from an alleged victim — no calls, no texts, no showing up uninvited.
Electronic monitoring or GPS tracking. Used to confirm you’re complying with home confinement or staying out of restricted areas.
Drug and alcohol testing. Regular testing, sometimes through a SCRAM device, to confirm sobriety.
Court attendance. Missing a hearing is its own serious problem and can trigger consequences independent of any other violation.
Pre-trial supervision check-ins. Routine reporting to a pre-trial officer to confirm you’re following the rules of your release.
If a Violation Has Already Happened
The first move is requesting a bond hearing, where there’s at least a chance to argue for reinstatement instead of sitting in jail until trial. But timing matters here more than almost anything else. The sooner a criminal defense attorney gets involved, the more room there is to push back on the allegation, present mitigating circumstances, or work toward avoiding a permanent revocation altogether. Waiting rarely helps.






