Missouri drug courts offer eligible defendants treatment-based alternatives to incarceration. Successful completion can result in dismissed charges or reduced sentences.
Published May 8, 2026
## Drug court in Missouri
**Drug courts** are specialized courts that supervise defendants with substance-abuse issues through intensive treatment programs in lieu of (or alongside) traditional criminal sentencing.
## Common drug-court types
**1. Adult drug court** — most common
**2. Family drug court** — DCFS-related cases involving parental substance abuse
**3. Juvenile drug court**
**4. Veterans treatment court** — substance abuse + PTSD / military trauma
**5. DUI / DWI court** — for impaired-driving offenses
**6. Mental health court** — co-occurring mental illness + addiction
**7. Federal drug court** — limited; varies by district
## Typical eligibility
Most drug courts require:
- **Non-violent offense** — drug possession, drug-related theft, etc.
- **No prior violent felonies** (or limited)
- **No major sex offenses**
- **Substance-abuse issues** verified by assessment
- **Voluntary participation** — defendant must want it
- **Plea agreement** — usually requires guilty plea (held in abeyance during program)
Some states (FL, NY, NC) have broader eligibility; others restrictive.
## Common ineligibility
- Violent felony charges / priors
- DUI causing death (drug court available; vehicular homicide usually excluded)
- Armed offenses
- Drug trafficking (large amounts)
- Gang affiliation in some jurisdictions
- Sex offenses
- Domestic violence (varies)
- Manufacturing meth in some states
## Program structure
Typical drug-court program:
- **12-24 months** duration
- **Phased approach** — increasing privileges as defendant progresses
- **Frequent court appearances** (weekly initially, monthly later)
- **Regular drug testing** (multiple times per week)
- **Substance-abuse treatment** (outpatient + sometimes residential)
- **Counseling / therapy**
- **Education / vocational requirements**
- **Employment requirement**
- **Sober support meetings** (AA / NA)
- **Restitution / community service**
- **Sanctions for non-compliance** (essays, weekend jail, more testing)
- **Rewards for compliance** (reduced supervision, certificates)
## Phases
Most drug courts have 4-5 phases:
- Phase 1: Stabilization (intensive supervision, frequent testing)
- Phase 2: Treatment engagement
- Phase 3: Relapse prevention + community involvement
- Phase 4: Continued sobriety + employment
- Phase 5: Graduation prep + aftercare
## Sanctions for violations
Drug courts use **graduated sanctions**:
- Verbal admonishment / essay
- Increased reporting
- More frequent testing
- Curfew
- Brief jail ("flash incarceration" — overnight to weekend)
- Community service
- Phase regression
- Termination from program (back to traditional sentencing)
Sanctions are progressive — minor relapses don't immediately end the program. Multiple positive tests, missed appearances, or new offenses can lead to termination.
## Successful completion
Outcomes vary by program:
- **Charge dismissal** — best outcome; case removed
- **Reduced charges** — felony to misdemeanor
- **Reduced sentence** — community service / probation rather than prison
- **Avoidance of mandatory minimums**
- **Sealing / expungement** eligibility (in some states)
## Termination from program
If defendant fails the program:
- Original guilty plea takes effect
- Sentencing proceeds to traditional disposition
- Often results in prison sentence (the alternative drug court was meant to avoid)
- Time served in drug court doesn't typically count against prison time
## Outcomes data
Drug courts have demonstrated:
- Lower recidivism than traditional prosecution
- Improved employment outcomes
- Reduced healthcare costs
- Lower long-term costs to taxpayers
- Higher recovery rates than untreated controls
## Voluntary participation
Drug court is voluntary:
- Defendant must agree
- Usually requires guilty plea (suspended)
- Defendant gives up some rights (jury trial, certain motions)
- Defendant can withdraw before plea is entered
- Program is intensive — many quit early
Drug court is often the right choice for those with substance-abuse issues — but a hard choice for those who'd prefer to fight the case.
## Cost
Many drug courts charge participants:
- Program fees ($25-$100/month)
- Drug-test fees
- Treatment co-pays
- Sometimes attorney fees
Indigent participants often qualify for fee waivers / sliding scale.
## What you should do
If you're charged with a drug offense in Missouri and have substance-abuse issues: ask your defense attorney about drug-court eligibility. Most Missouri criminal-defense attorneys familiar with the local drug court can assess fit and negotiate entry. Don't agree to drug court without understanding the commitment — it's harder than traditional probation, but the outcomes are usually better.
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*This guide is general information about Missouri law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Drug-court programs vary widely by jurisdiction. Talk to a licensed Missouri 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.