Drug Charge Bail Amounts in California: Possession, Sales & Trafficking
Drug charges in California cover a huge range — from a misdemeanor possession ticket that ends in a same-day release to a felony trafficking case with bail in the six figures. The difference comes down to three things: what the substance is, how much of it there was, and whether the prosecutor believes it was for personal use or for sale. This guide breaks down how bail is set for each tier so you know what to expect before you call.
The short version: bail for a California drug charge is set by the bail schedule in the county where the arrest happened, then adjusted at arraignment based on the specific code section and any enhancements. A bail bond costs a premium of around 10% of the full amount. You can estimate yours with our California bail cost calculator.
How California classifies drug charges
Since Proposition 47 passed in 2014, most simple-possession offenses for personal use were reduced from felonies to misdemeanors. That single change reshaped bail at the lower end — many possession arrests now end in a citation or a low bail amount. The serious money is reserved for sales, transportation, manufacturing, and quantity-based enhancements.
- Simple possession (Health & Safety Code 11350, 11377) — usually a misdemeanor after Prop 47. Often cite-and-release or low bail.
- Possession for sale (HS 11351, 11378) — a felony. Bail rises sharply because intent to distribute is alleged.
- Sale or transportation (HS 11352, 11379) — a felony, typically the next tier up.
- Manufacturing (HS 11379.6) — a serious felony, especially where chemicals or labs are involved.
- Trafficking / large-quantity enhancements (HS 11370.4) — weight enhancements stack on top of the base charge and can multiply bail dramatically.
Typical bail ranges for California drug charges
Exact numbers vary by county — Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, and San Bernardino each publish their own bail schedule and the figures differ. The ranges below are typical, not guarantees, and any of them can move at arraignment.
- Misdemeanor simple possession: frequently cite-and-release, or bail in the low thousands.
- Felony possession for sale: commonly tens of thousands of dollars, depending on the drug and county.
- Sale / transportation: generally a step higher than possession for sale.
- Trafficking with weight enhancements: can reach the high six figures once HS 11370.4 enhancements are added.
Because the spread is so wide, the most reliable way to learn the real number is to have a licensed bondsman pull the booking record. We can do that 24/7 — start by locating the person with our California inmate locator.
What pushes drug bail higher
- Quantity. Weight enhancements under HS 11370.4 are the single biggest multiplier. The more product alleged, the higher the bail.
- Type of substance. Schedule I and II narcotics generally carry higher bail than lower-schedule substances.
- Alleged intent to sell. Scales, packaging, cash, or text messages can turn a possession case into a possession-for-sale case — and the bail with it.
- Location enhancements. Sales near a school, park, or treatment facility can add penalties and raise bail.
- Priors. A record of drug or other felonies pushes the number up, and certain priors can trigger a bail-schedule increase.
- Holds. A probation, parole, or immigration hold can block release even after bail is posted. We explain how each one works in our guide to police, ICE & “no bail” holds.
Can drug bail be reduced?
Yes, and drug cases are among the more common candidates. At arraignment — usually within 48 hours of arrest, as we cover in our arraignment guide — a defense attorney can ask the judge to reduce bail based on community ties, lack of record, employment, or the realistic strength of the case. For first-time or personal-use cases, judges often grant release on the defendant’s own recognizance (no money required) or a substantially lowered amount.
How a bail bond works for a drug charge
If you can’t pay the full bail in cash, a licensed bail bondsman posts it for you in exchange for a premium — typically about 10% of the face amount. On a $30,000 felony drug bail, that’s roughly $3,000, and we can usually arrange a payment plan so you don’t pay it all at once. See how little can get the process started with a $500 down bail bond in LA County, and read the mechanics in our how does bail work guide.
Step-by-step if a loved one was arrested on a drug charge
- Locate them and get the booking number using the inmate locator.
- Call a licensed bondsman to confirm the exact charge, the bail amount, and whether any hold is attached.
- Decide on representation. For any felony drug charge, a defense attorney should be involved before arraignment.
- Arrange the bond. You’ll need a cosigner and the premium or a payment plan — see what cosigning means in our cosigner guide.
- Post and walk out. Once the bond is posted, release timing depends on the jail — see how long it takes to get out.
Facing a California drug charge? Let’s get the real bail number and a plan to get out. Call 800.590.7321 or message 626.862.0627 any time.
Related guides
- California Bail Amounts Hub
- Gun-Related Charges Bail Amounts
- Police, ICE & “No Bail” Holds
- California Bail Cost Calculator
- Iron Bail Bonds FAQ
24-hour California bail bonds — anywhere in the state. Call 800.590.7321 or send us a message.