Reentry

44% in the First Year: What America's Recidivism Numbers Really Tell Us

· Sanctuary Community Initiative · 2 min read

A peer support group in close conversation at a community center, with the post title 44% in the First Year overlaid

Roughly 600,000 people walk out of American prisons every year. What happens next is one of the most studied (and most misunderstood) questions in criminal justice.

The headline numbers

The Bureau of Justice Statistics, the federal government's primary source for this data, has tracked release cohorts for decades. The pattern is consistent: about 44% of people released from state prison are rearrested within their first year out. By year three, roughly two-thirds have been rearrested. Follow the same group for ten years, and 82% have been arrested at least once.

Read quickly, those numbers sound like proof that nothing works. Read closely, they say the opposite.

The number that matters most: when

The single most important detail in the BJS data is timing. Rearrest risk is dramatically front-loaded, the first year is the steepest cliff, and each year after release the annual arrest rate falls. In the 2008 release cohort, the yearly arrest percentage dropped from 43% in year one to 22% by year ten.

Translation: the window where support matters most is short, early, and knowable. It's the same window when someone is most likely to be unhoused, unemployed, and disconnected, a 27% unemployment rate among formerly incarcerated people, per the Prison Policy Initiative, and homelessness rates roughly ten times the general public's.

The recidivism curve isn't a mystery. It's the predictable output of releasing people into instability and expecting stability back.

The good news buried in the data

Recidivism is falling. The Council of State Governments Justice Center reports that national three-year reincarceration rates have dropped roughly 20% over the past decade, from about 35% to about 28%. Tens of thousands fewer people return to prison each year than a decade ago. States that invested in reentry support, identification documents, housing programs, and employment pathways are seeing the returns.

And targeted research goes further. The Urban Institute's Returning Home study found that people who received comprehensive wraparound support were substantially less likely to return to prison than those who didn't.

What this means for our community

At Sanctuary Community Initiative, we track our own numbers against these national baselines, and the difference support makes shows up clearly in our outcomes. When people leaving treatment and incarceration have housing, transportation, food, and someone in their corner during that critical first stretch, the national statistics stop being destiny.

The data doesn't say people can't change. It says systems haven't given them a fair chance to. That's a solvable problem.

See how our participants' outcomes compare on The Numbers page.

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