Reviewed on: April 13,2026
Inmate Transfer

How Long Does It Take to Transfer to a Texas SAFP Program?

my boyfriend has been in jail since aug.11,2014.he was sentensed to 6 months safp special needs program.they keep saing he will be transfered when a bed is ready.how long do inmates generally wait before transfered?the PO has submitted the pappers to be on list.

SAFP, which stands for Substance Abuse Felony Punishment, is a Texas state program that places eligible offenders in a structured residential treatment facility
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer September 06,2014 · Inmate Transfer
1

SAFP, which stands for Substance Abuse Felony Punishment, is a Texas state program that places eligible offenders in a structured residential treatment facility rather than a standard prison. Bed availability in the SAFP system is limited and the waitlist can be significant, which is why transfers often take much longer than families expect.

Once the paperwork has been submitted and an inmate is on the list, the timeline is entirely determined by when a bed opens up at the receiving SAFP facility. There is no standard wait time. Some inmates transfer within a few weeks. Others wait several months or longer, depending on demand and turnover at the facility they are being sent to.

There is nothing that can be done from the outside to accelerate the process. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice manages SAFP placement based on program capacity, and neither the county jail nor the family has any leverage over that timeline.

Every day spent waiting in the county jail counts toward the sentence, so the time is not being lost. And once your family member does get into the SAFP program, successful completion can lead to placement in a halfway house and earlier release than a standard sentence would produce. The program exists specifically to provide a path out that prioritizes treatment over incarceration.

Accepted Answer Date Created: September 06,2014
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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.