What’s the Difference Between Violation & Revocation?

The difference between a probation violation and probation revocation lies in the stage of the process. A violation happens when someone breaks the rules of their probation, while a revocation is the court’s decision to end probation and send the person back to jail or prison because of those violations. In Kansas and most states, a violation starts the process, but revocation is the outcome if the judge decides the offender failed to comply.
What Is a Probation Violation?
A probation violation occurs when an offender disobeys one or more terms of their probation. Probation terms can include meeting with a probation officer, avoiding drug use, paying fines, or completing community service. Violations can be technical (breaking rules) or substantive (committing a new crime).
- Technical violations – Missing meetings, curfew violations, failing drug tests, or not completing assigned programs.
- Substantive violations – Committing a new offense while on probation.
- Consequences – Can lead to warnings, increased supervision, or a revocation hearing.
What Is a Probation Revocation?
Probation revocation happens when the court decides to cancel probation because of one or more violations. After a hearing, the judge can revoke probation completely or modify it with stricter conditions. Once revoked, the defendant may serve part or all of their original jail or prison sentence.
- Triggered by violations – Revocation only occurs after confirmed probation violations.
- Hearing required – The judge reviews evidence to determine if the violation was willful and serious.
- Outcome – Probation can be revoked, extended, or modified.
How the Process Works
When a violation is reported, the probation officer files a violation notice or warrant. This begins the revocation process. The defendant is brought before the court for a revocation hearing where both sides present evidence. The judge then decides the result.
- Violation report is filed by probation officer.
- Defendant receives notice and may be arrested or summoned to court.
- Revocation hearing determines guilt and punishment.
- Judge either reinstates, modifies, or revokes probation.
Possible Outcomes of a Revocation Hearing
After reviewing the case, the judge can decide several outcomes based on the nature of the violation and the offender’s record.
- Continue probation – The judge may allow probation to continue with a warning.
- Modify conditions – The court can impose stricter rules, extra supervision, or treatment programs.
- Revoke probation – The defendant’s probation is canceled, and they serve the original sentence in custody.
A probation violation is breaking the rules of probation, while a revocation is the judge’s decision to end it due to those violations. Violations start the process, revocation is the result if the court decides the offender failed to comply.



