🔍 Free verification tool

Verify a bail bondsman's license

Before you hand over money or sign anything, confirm the bondsman is actually licensed in your state. Unlicensed bondsmen operate illegally and you have no recourse if something goes wrong. This takes two minutes.

🚨
Never pay a bondsman before verifying their license. Unlicensed bondsmen cannot legally post bail. If you pay one, your money is gone and the person in jail stays there. License fraud is more common than most people realize.

How to verify a bondsman's license by state

Select a state to get step-by-step instructions for that state's insurance department

License verification checklist

Work through this list before signing any bail bond contract. Click each item to mark it complete.

Confirm the bondsman's license is active — not expired or suspended
An expired license means they cannot legally operate. "Active" is the only status that counts. Suspended or revoked means walk away immediately.
Write down the license number before the search
Ask the bondsman for their license number directly. If they hesitate or can't produce it, stop. A legitimate bondsman has this memorized.
Search by license number AND by name — both should match
Cross-reference. The name on the license must match the person or company you are dealing with. Stolen license numbers do get used.
Verify the license covers your type of charge
State bail bonds and federal bail bonds require separate licenses. If the charge is federal, confirm federal licensure specifically. Ask: "Are you licensed to write federal bonds in this state?"
Check for complaints or disciplinary actions
Many state insurance departments show complaint history alongside the license. A bondsman with multiple complaints is a red flag even if technically licensed.
Screenshot the license lookup result with timestamp
If a dispute arises later, having proof of the license status at the time you engaged them matters. Screenshot the state database result page.

Red flags to walk away from immediately

🚩 Refuses to provide license number

Every licensed bondsman in every state has a license number they are required to provide. Refusal is an automatic disqualifier.

🚩 Offers a rate below the statutory minimum

If your state sets a 10% minimum and they offer 7%, they are either unlicensed or planning to add hidden fees. Either way, walk away.

🚩 Pressure to sign immediately

Legitimate bondsmen understand you need a few minutes to verify their license. Anyone who won't give you five minutes to check is hiding something.

🚩 Asks for cash only with no receipt

All legitimate bail transactions come with documentation. Paying cash with no paperwork means no legal protection if the bondsman disappears.

⚠️ No physical office or address

Not a hard disqualifier — some bondsmen operate remotely — but a verified physical address you can locate on Google Maps adds legitimacy.

⚠️ Recently licensed with no track record

New licenses aren't automatically bad, but for a high-dollar bond, experience matters. Ask how many bonds they write per year.

💡
If a bondsman fails verification: Call your state's insurance department directly to report them. Most states have a consumer hotline specifically for unlicensed bail activity. This protects the next family.
DOCTYPE html> How to Verify a Bail Bondsman's License — All 50 States | BailGuide
🔍 Free verification tool

Verify a bail bondsman's license

Before you hand over money or sign anything, confirm the bondsman is actually licensed in your state. Unlicensed bondsmen operate illegally and you have no recourse if something goes wrong. This takes two minutes.

🚨
Never pay a bondsman before verifying their license. Unlicensed bondsmen cannot legally post bail. If you pay one, your money is gone and the person in jail stays there. License fraud is more common than most people realize.

How to verify a bondsman's license by state

Select a state to get step-by-step instructions for that state's insurance department

License verification checklist

Work through this list before signing any bail bond contract. Click each item to mark it complete.

Confirm the bondsman's license is active — not expired or suspended
An expired license means they cannot legally operate. "Active" is the only status that counts. Suspended or revoked means walk away immediately.
Write down the license number before the search
Ask the bondsman for their license number directly. If they hesitate or can't produce it, stop. A legitimate bondsman has this memorized.
Search by license number AND by name — both should match
Cross-reference. The name on the license must match the person or company you are dealing with. Stolen license numbers do get used.
Verify the license covers your type of charge
State bail bonds and federal bail bonds require separate licenses. If the charge is federal, confirm federal licensure specifically. Ask: "Are you licensed to write federal bonds in this state?"
Check for complaints or disciplinary actions
Many state insurance departments show complaint history alongside the license. A bondsman with multiple complaints is a red flag even if technically licensed.
Screenshot the license lookup result with timestamp
If a dispute arises later, having proof of the license status at the time you engaged them matters. Screenshot the state database result page.

Red flags to walk away from immediately

🚩 Refuses to provide license number

Every licensed bondsman in every state has a license number they are required to provide. Refusal is an automatic disqualifier.

🚩 Offers a rate below the statutory minimum

If your state sets a 10% minimum and they offer 7%, they are either unlicensed or planning to add hidden fees. Either way, walk away.

🚩 Pressure to sign immediately

Legitimate bondsmen understand you need a few minutes to verify their license. Anyone who won't give you five minutes to check is hiding something.

🚩 Asks for cash only with no receipt

All legitimate bail transactions come with documentation. Paying cash with no paperwork means no legal protection if the bondsman disappears.

⚠️ No physical office or address

Not a hard disqualifier — some bondsmen operate remotely — but a verified physical address you can locate on Google Maps adds legitimacy.

⚠️ Recently licensed with no track record

New licenses aren't automatically bad, but for a high-dollar bond, experience matters. Ask how many bonds they write per year.

💡
If a bondsman fails verification: Call your state's insurance department directly to report them. Most states have a consumer hotline specifically for unlicensed bail activity. This protects the next family.