Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974

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Under the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act 1974 criminal convictions can become spent or ignored after a rehabilitation period, although they remain on the Police National Computer. The rehabilitation period varies depending on the sentence or order imposed by the court - not the offence. Custodial sentences of more than two and half years can never become spent. The following sentences become spent after fixed periods from the date of conviction:

Sentence Rehabilitation period

Age 18 or over when convicted
Rehabilitation period

Age 17 or under when convicted
Prison sentences of 6 months or less, including suspended sentences, youth custody (abolished in 1988) and detention in a young offender institution 7 years 3 and half years
Prison sentences of more than 6 months to 2 and half years, including suspended sentences, youth custody (abolished in 1988) and detention in a young offender institution 10 years 5 years
Borstal (abolished in 1983) 7 years 7 years
Detention Centres (abolished in 1988) 3 years 3 years
Fines (even if subsequently imprisoned for fine default), compensation, probation (for convictions on or after 3 February 1995), community service, combination, action plan, curfew, drug treatment and testing and reparation orders 5 years 2 and half years
Absolute discharge 6 months 6 months

With some sentences, the rehabilitation period varies:

Sentence Rehabilitation Period
Conditional discharge or bind-over, probation (for convictions before 3 February 1995), supervision, care-orders 1 year or until the order expires (whichever is longer)
Attendance centre orders 1 year after the order expires
Hospital orders )with or without a restriction order) 5 years or 2 years after the order expires (whichever is longer)
Referral Order Once the order expires