You are waiting, and the waiting is its own punishment. A pending criminal charge may affect your job, your housing application, your custody arrangement, and your peace of mind while you wait for answers about what happens next. Nobody told you how long pending criminal charges take, and every time you try to find out, you get a different answer.
At Walter J. Pink & Associates, we know that the time between an arrest and a resolution is not empty, and we work to help clients protect their rights and position themselves for the strongest possible outcome while the case remains pending.
What Does “Pending Criminal Charges” Mean in Texas?
“Pending criminal charges” describes the period between the moment the State formally accuses someone of a crime and the moment the case resolves, whether through a trial verdict, a plea agreement, or a dismissal. During that window, the defendant must meet court conditions, and the case affects every part of daily life.
How Long Do Pending Criminal Charges Take to Resolve?
No single timeline applies to every case, but Texas law sets limits on how long the State can keep someone in legal limbo. The charge itself, where the defendant is, and how aggressively both sides pursue the case all shape the actual timeline.
Does the State Have a Deadline to File Charges?
Yes. Texas law gives prosecutors a limited window to file charges after a crime occurs. Misdemeanors carry a two-year deadline. Most felonies carry a three-year deadline, though serious offenses like theft by a public servant, sexual assault, and arson extend to ten years. Some offenses, including murder, manslaughter, and sexual assault of a child, carry no deadline at all.
The applicable deadline depends on the specific offense and the facts involved in the investigation.
What Happens If Someone Sits in Jail Waiting for Charges?
If the State jails someone on a felony charge but does not demonstrate its readiness for trial within 90 days, the law requires the court to release the person on bond or reduce bail. For Class A and Class B misdemeanors, the window shrinks to 30 and 15 days, respectively.
These rules do not dismiss the case, but they do prevent the State from holding someone in jail indefinitely.
How Long Can Criminal Charges Be Pending Before Dismissal Becomes Possible?
Once a case reaches the 180-day mark after arrest or bail, and the State has not filed formal documents, Texas law requires the court to dismiss the prosecution unless the State demonstrates good cause. That dismissal, however, does not automatically close the case. Prosecutors typically retain the right to refile if the original statute of limitations has not expired.
Beyond these procedural checkpoints, the Texas Constitution and the Sixth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution both guarantee the right to a speedy trial. Texas courts do not apply a strict numerical deadline for what qualifies as “speedy”.
Courts instead examine factors such as:
- The length of the delay,
- The reason for it,
- Whether the defendant demanded a faster resolution, and
- Whether the delay harmed the defense.
Although courts can dismiss cases for speedy-trial violations, those dismissals are relatively uncommon and depend heavily on the facts of the case.
What Factors Slow a Case Down?
Several practical realities may extend pending criminal charges well past what most people expect:
- Court docket congestion. Texas courts carry heavy caseloads, and cases involving defendants on bond sit lower in the priority queue than those involving jailed defendants.
- Ongoing investigation. When the State continues gathering evidence after an arrest, it may delay filing a formal charging instrument until investigators complete their work.
- Lab and forensic backlogs. Drug, DNA, and blood analysis results frequently take months to return from state labs, and the State typically will not proceed without them.
- Negotiation timelines. Plea discussions between defense counsel and prosecutors can extend the pending period, though such delays often serve the defendant’s interests.
Each of these factors means the defense needs someone actively engaged in the case, not simply waiting for the State to make its next move.
Why the Right Team Changes How Long Pending Criminal Charges Take
Waiting on a pending case is its own kind of pressure, and having a Houston criminal defense attorney who actively works the file rather than wait alongside you makes a real difference in how that time unfolds.
Walter J. Pink & Associates has handled more than 25,000 cases across five decades. The three generations of Pink attorneys have spent those years learning how to move cases forward and build toward the best available outcome while the clock runs. More than 3,000 dismissals and 600-plus trials reflect what active, skilled representation produces over time.
Every Day Counts. Start Building Your Defense Now
Every case presents different challenges, but experienced legal representation can help you understand the process, avoid costly mistakes, and make informed decisions while your case remains pending. The steps you take early in a criminal case may affect how the case develops moving forward. Our firm helps clients navigate that uncertainty with clear guidance, an active defense strategy, and decades of Texas courtroom experience.
Contact us today so we can start building your defense, because the outcome of a pending charge almost always traces back to what happened at the very beginning.
Legal References Used to Inform This Page:
To ensure the accuracy and clarity of this page, we referenced official legal and other resources during the content development process:
- Misdemeanor Statute of Limitations, Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Art. 12.02.
- Felony Statute of Limitations, Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Art. 12.01.
- Release Because of Delay, Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Art. 17.151.
- Defendant in Custody and No Indictment Presented, Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Art. 32.01.
- Texas Constitution, Art. 1, § 10 — Right to Speedy Trial.