Thousands of offenders in England and Wales are ignoring community service orders by refusing to begin them or failing to finish the required hours, according to Ministry of Justice data.
Key Statistics on Non-Compliance
Courts issued 53,685 unpaid work orders in the year ending March 2025. However, 3,200 offenders never started their sentences, and one-third failed to complete the mandated hours.
These orders serve as alternatives to prison, requiring 20 to 300 hours of tasks such as litter picking, painting community centers, or gardening.
Criticism from Lawmakers
Conservative MP Neil O’Brien highlighted the issue, stating: ‘The system is a joke – and thousands of criminals treat it as such. People hear their sentence in court and know they can safely ignore it, if they choose. Some knock off early while others never even bother to turn up. If you’re a victim of one of their crimes, or the place where you live is affected, you’re going to wonder what’s become of justice in this country.’
The Commons Public Accounts Committee has warned that the Probation Service remains ‘teetering on the brink,’ amid rising pressures.
Government Measures and Improvements
Offenders who fail to complete community service risk electronic tagging, fines, or return to prison.
The government has committed an additional £700 million to the Probation Service and plans to hire 1,300 more probation officers this year.
Completion rates show slight progress since the service returned to public ownership in 2021-22, when 8.4 percent failed to appear and 40.7 percent did not finish their hours.
Ongoing Challenges
Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, chairman of the committee, declared: ‘The Probation Service is failing. The endpoint is demonstrated by our report showing the number of prisoners recalled to jail is at an all-time high.’




