Alabama’s expungement law is fairly specific and more limited than in some other states, but it has expanded in recent years. Here’s a clear, easy-to-understand breakdown of how it works 👇
📜 The Law (Alabama Code)
Expungement in Alabama is governed by Title 15, Chapter 27 of the Alabama Code (§15-27-1 through §15-27-11).
- Expungement is not automatic
- You must file a petition in court
- A judge decides whether to grant it
✅ What CAN Be Expunged in Alabama
1. Non-convictions (most common)
You are usually eligible if your case did NOT end in a conviction, such as:
- Charges dismissed
- No-billed by a grand jury
- Found not guilty (acquitted)
- Charges dropped after a diversion or deferred program
👉 These are the easiest cases to expunge.
2. Certain misdemeanor convictions
Alabama now allows some convictions to be expunged if:
- The offense is non-violent
- You completed all terms (fines, probation, etc.)
- You waited at least 3 years after conviction
- You have limited prior convictions (usually capped)
3. Some non-violent felony situations
This is more limited, but possible if:
- The felony charge was dismissed or not proven, OR
- It was a non-violent Class C or D felony and specific conditions are met
❌ What CANNOT Be Expunged
Generally, Alabama does NOT allow expungement for:
- Violent crimes (like murder, assault, etc.)
- Sex offenses
- Crimes involving children
- DUI convictions
- Serious or high-harm felonies
⏳ Waiting Periods (important)
How long you must wait depends on the case outcome:
- Dismissed cases: often immediately or after a short period
- Dismissed without prejudice: typically 2–5 years
- After diversion programs: about 1 year
- Misdemeanor convictions: at least 3 years
⚖️ Key Requirements
To qualify, you usually must:
- Have no pending charges
- Complete all court requirements
- Pay all fines, fees, restitution
- Stay crime-free during the waiting period
🧠 What Expungement Actually Does
If granted:
- Your record is removed from public view
- Employers and landlords generally won’t see it
- Legally, you can often say the incident did not occur
However:
- Law enforcement and courts may still access it in limited situations
⚠️ Important Reality Check
Alabama is considered a “limited expungement state”:
- Not everything qualifies
- Convictions are much harder than dismissed cases
- The process can be technical and paperwork-heavy
👍 Bottom line
- Best chance: dismissed or not-guilty cases
- Possible but harder: non-violent misdemeanors and some low-level felonies
- Not eligible: violent or serious offenses
📝 How to Apply for Expungement in Alabama
1. Make sure you’re eligible first
Before doing anything, confirm:
- Your case qualifies (dismissed, not guilty, or eligible conviction)
- You’ve waited the required time
- You’ve completed all fines, fees, probation, etc.
- You have no pending charges
If any of these aren’t met, your petition will likely be denied.
2. Get your criminal record
You’ll need details about your case:
- Charge(s)
- Case number
- Court where it was handled
- Final outcome
👉 You can get this from:
- The court clerk
- Or the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency (ALEA)
3. Fill out the Petition for Expungement
You must complete the official form:
- “Petition for Expungement” (Form CR-65)
You’ll include:
- Personal info
- Arrest details
- Case outcome
- Why you qualify
- Any supporting explanation (this matters more than people think)
4. Gather required documents
This is where many applications fail, so don’t skip anything:
- Certified case action summary (from the court)
- Proof of case outcome (dismissal, not guilty, etc.)
- Proof you completed any requirements (if applicable)
5. File your petition with the correct court
You must file in the same court where the case was handled.
- Usually the circuit court clerk
- Submit:
- Your petition
- All supporting documents
6. Pay the filing fee 💵
- Standard fee: $300
- This is paid to the court when filing
👉 If you can’t afford it, you can request a fee waiver (called an indigency affidavit)
7. The prosecutor and agencies are notified
After you file:
- The district attorney
- The arresting agency
- The victim (if applicable)
…all get notified and can object.
8. Wait for review (and possibly a hearing)
- Some cases are decided on paperwork alone
- Others require a hearing in front of a judge
The judge looks at:
- Your record
- Your behavior since the case
- Any objections
- Whether expungement serves justice
9. Get the decision
If approved:
- The court orders agencies to seal/remove your record
- This can take a few weeks to fully process
If denied:
- You may be able to reapply later, depending on the reason
⏱️ Timeline
Typical timeframe:
- Filing → decision: 1 to 3 months (sometimes longer)
- Full record removal: a few additional weeks
⚠️ Common mistakes to avoid
These trip people up all the time:
- Missing documents
- Filing too early
- Not paying all fines first
- Using incomplete or incorrect case info
- Writing nothing in the “why” section
💡 Pro tip (this really matters)
Even though you can file on your own, many people choose to work with an attorney because:
- One small mistake = denial
- Attorneys know how to present your case in the best light
- They can speed things up and avoid back-and-forth
👍 Simple summary
- Confirm eligibility
- Get your records
- Fill out the petition
- Attach documents
- File with court + pay $300
- Wait for review
- Attend hearing if required
- Get decision
