District of Columbia divides offenses into felonies (more serious) and misdemeanors (less serious). DC has no formal lettered classification but uses sentencing guidelines analogous to federal practice.
Published May 6, 2026
## Felonies vs misdemeanors in District of Columbia
Every state divides crimes into two big buckets: **felonies** (more serious, generally punishable by 1+ year in state prison) and **misdemeanors** (less serious, punishable by jail time of 1 year or less, or fines). The line between the two has consequences far beyond the sentence.
### How District of Columbia classifies felonies
DC has no formal lettered classification but uses sentencing guidelines analogous to federal practice.
### How District of Columbia classifies misdemeanors
Misdemeanors maxed at 180 days.
## Why the distinction matters
A felony conviction follows you for life in ways a misdemeanor doesn't:
- **Voting rights** — many states disenfranchise felons (during incarceration, probation, or permanently)
- **Firearm rights** — federal law bars felons from possessing firearms (state laws may do the same)
- **Jury service** — felons are barred from juries in most states
- **Public office and licensure** — many professional licenses (legal, medical, real estate, security) are denied to felons
- **Employment** — felonies show up on standard background checks; ban-the-box laws help only at hiring stage
- **Housing** — landlords can refuse to rent to felons; public housing has specific bars
- **Immigration** — non-citizens face deportation for many felonies (and even some misdemeanors deemed "crimes of moral turpitude")
- **Education** — federal student aid is restricted for some drug offenses
- **Custody** — a felony can affect child-custody arrangements
## Where the line gets drawn
Most states use the federal definition: an offense punishable by **more than 1 year** in state prison is a felony. Some specific markers:
- A theft of property over a statutory threshold (often $500-$2,500) becomes a felony
- Drug possession is felony or misdemeanor depending on substance and quantity (state varies wildly)
- Domestic violence is often misdemeanor on a first offense, felony with priors or aggravators
- DUI is misdemeanor on a first offense in nearly every state, felony on multiple priors or with injury/death
- Assault is a graduated offense — simple misdemeanor, aggravated felony, with-deadly-weapon felony, etc.
## Wobblers and reduction
Many states allow some felony charges to be reduced to misdemeanors at sentencing or after successful completion of probation:
- **California's PC 17(b)** — wobblers can be designated misdemeanors at sentencing or by motion later
- **Reduction-after-probation** — some states let a felony be reduced to a misdemeanor after successful probation completion
- **Sentencing alternatives** — drug court, mental-health court, veteran's court, and similar diversion programs can result in reduction or dismissal
## Sentencing structures
States use one of three main sentencing structures:
- **Indeterminate** — the judge sets a range (e.g., 5-10 years) and the parole board decides actual release
- **Determinate** — the judge sets a specific term and the defendant serves that time minus good-time credits
- **Sentencing guidelines** — a grid based on offense severity + criminal history determines the presumptive sentence
Many states blend approaches.
## What you should do
If you've been charged in District of Columbia, the FIRST question your defense attorney will ask is what class/level the offense is and what the sentencing range looks like. Even if conviction is a foregone conclusion, the difference between a felony plea and a misdemeanor reduction can be the difference between a manageable life and a permanently restricted one. Talk to a District of Columbia criminal-defense attorney — most offer free consultations.
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*This guide is general information about District of Columbia law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Classification and sentencing rules are detail-heavy and frequently amended. Talk to a licensed District of Columbia criminal-defense attorney about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.