Reviewed on: April 16,2026
Parole, Probation & Supervised Release

Can You Earn Good Time After a Parole Violation Return?

Thank you so much he is in on the same charge he violated his parole he earned the maximum in prison first time so he in again I didn't know if he was eligible again for the good time credit thanks

When someone is returned to prison for violating parole, the situation is different from a fresh sentence and the good time picture changes significantly.
Ask The Inmate
Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer October 20,2015 · Parole, Probation & Supervised Release
1

When someone is returned to prison for violating parole, the situation is different from a fresh sentence and the good time picture changes significantly.

A parole violation typically results in the inmate being required to serve the remainder of the original sentence, meaning the portion they were released early to serve in the community. That unserved time gets reinstated and they go back in to finish it. Because this is not a new sentence being imposed but rather a reinstatement of time already calculated, good time credits on that returned portion are generally not available the way they would be on a new sentence.

Think of it this way. The good time was already factored into the original release date. When parole gets revoked, the system is essentially saying the early release was a privilege that was forfeited, and the remaining time has to be served out without the same credit-earning opportunities that applied the first time around.

Whether any additional programming credits or earned time credits under the First Step Act apply depends on the specific jurisdiction and the nature of the violation. Federal inmates returned on a violation may have some limited options worth exploring through the case manager, but the general posture of a violation sentence is that it fills the unserved portion with little flexibility.

Accepted Answer Date Created: October 20,2015
Was this helpful?

My situation is different — ask your own question.

Our advisors answer within 24 hours. Free, always. Former federal and state inmates with direct experience.

About this answer: This response was prepared by InmateAid’s editorial team in consultation with former inmates who have direct experience with the federal correctional system. InmateAid has served families of the incarcerated since 2012. This is general information only — not legal advice. Last reviewed April 2026.