Find verified, licensed bail bond agents across Boone, Kenton, Campbell, and Hamilton counties. Real phone numbers. Real agents. Available now.
Each county page lists licensed agents, local jail contact info, booking procedures, and what to expect after posting bond.
Florence, Burlington, Hebron, Union, Walton
Covington, Independence, Erlanger, Edgewood, Fort Mitchell
Newport, Alexandria, Cold Spring, Wilder, Bellevue
Cincinnati, Blue Ash, Norwood, Cheviot, Madeira
Understanding the process helps you move faster and make better decisions. Here's what to expect in NKY and Cincinnati.
After arrest, the defendant is booked into the county jail. In Kentucky, a bail amount is typically set at arraignment — within 24–48 hours. In Ohio (Hamilton County), a duty judge sets bail, sometimes within hours.
Once bail is set, call a licensed bondsman. You'll need the defendant's full name, booking number, the jail they're in, and the bail amount. Most agents can start the paperwork immediately, even at 3am.
The bondsman charges a non-refundable premium — 10% in both Kentucky and Ohio. On a $10,000 bail, you pay $1,000. The bondsman posts the full $10,000 with the court on your behalf.
For higher bail amounts, agents may require collateral: real estate equity, a vehicle title, or other assets. This is returned when the case concludes, provided the defendant makes all court appearances.
Once paperwork is signed and premium is paid, the bondsman goes to the jail to post bond. Release processing at Boone County typically takes 2–6 hours; Kenton County 3–8 hours; Hamilton County can take 4–12 hours depending on jail population.
Missing a court date is the worst thing that can happen. The bond is forfeited, a warrant is issued, and the bondsman will send a recovery agent. Always keep your attorney and bondsman informed of any scheduling changes.
| Factor | Kentucky (Boone, Kenton, Campbell) | Ohio (Hamilton County) |
|---|---|---|
| Bond Premium Rate | 10% (state-regulated, non-negotiable) | 10% (state-regulated, non-negotiable) |
| Licensing Body | Kentucky Department of Insurance | Ohio Department of Insurance |
| Bail Set By | District Court judge at arraignment | Duty judge, often within hours of booking |
| Cash Bond Option | Yes — pay full bail amount directly to court | Yes — 10% cash deposit to court (no bondsman needed for some cases) |
| Bond Forfeiture Window | 180 days to surrender defendant before forfeiture is final | 30 days before forfeiture is finalized (shorter — act fast) |
| Weekend/Holiday Bail | Possible but releases may be slower — plan for +2–4 hrs | Hamilton County Justice Center processes 24/7, but staffing varies |
| Federal Charges | Bail bonds are NOT used for federal cases. Federal bail requires a federal surety — different process entirely. | |
The bondsman's fee (premium) is 10% of the total bail amount in both Kentucky and Ohio. This amount is non-refundable regardless of case outcome.
The premium is the bondsman's fee — it is not bail itself, and it is not refundable even if charges are dropped or the defendant is found not guilty.
The bondsman posts the full bail amount with the court as a guarantee that the defendant will appear at all hearings.
In Kentucky and Ohio, bail bondsmen must be licensed by the state Department of Insurance. Never pay a premium to an unlicensed agent — you have no legal protection.
The Kentucky Department of Insurance maintains an online licensee lookup. Search by name or license number before signing any paperwork.
KY DOI License Lookup →The Ohio Department of Insurance licenses bail agents (called "surety bail bond agents" in Ohio). Verify via the Ohio DOI producer search tool.
Ohio DOI License Lookup →After a bondsman posts bond, Boone County Jail typically processes releases in 2–6 hours. On weekends and holidays it can stretch to 8 hours. The bondsman cannot speed up the jail's internal release process — the wait is on the county, not the agent.
Many bondsmen in the NKY area do offer payment plans, especially for larger bail amounts. You'll typically need to put down a portion upfront (often 50%) and sign a payment agreement. Terms vary by agent — ask before signing. The 10% total rate is regulated and cannot be negotiated lower.
Both states charge 10% premium. The key differences: Ohio has a shorter bond forfeiture window (30 days vs. 180 days in Kentucky), and Ohio courts sometimes accept a 10% cash deposit directly to the court — bypassing the need for a bondsman entirely. In Kentucky, cash bonds require the full bail amount paid to the court, so bondsmen are more commonly used.
Have the following ready: the defendant's full legal name, their date of birth, which jail or detention center they're in, their booking number (call the jail if you don't have it), and the bail amount set by the court. If bail hasn't been set yet, the bondsman can still walk you through what to expect.
No. The 10% premium is the bondsman's fee for services rendered — it is not a deposit. It is non-refundable regardless of how the case ends. This is the same in both Kentucky and Ohio, and is set by state law.
The court issues a bench warrant and begins the bond forfeiture process. In Kentucky, the bondsman has 180 days to surrender the defendant before the full bail amount is forfeited. In Ohio, it's only 30 days. The bondsman will actively attempt to locate the defendant. If collateral was pledged, it is at risk of being seized.
Yes. Bondsmen are private businesses and can refuse clients. Common reasons: flight risk (defendant has prior failures to appear), out-of-state defendant with no local ties, very high bail with insufficient collateral, or the charges involved. If one agent declines, try another — policies vary.
Yes. The Kenton County Detention Center in Covington processes bond releases 24/7. However, staffing levels at night mean releases typically take longer — expect 4–10 hours for nighttime bonds vs. 3–6 hours during business hours.