When people hear "home confinement," they picture someone lounging at home in pajamas, free from prison walls. The reality is far more complex. I'm writing this from my living room in November 2026, wearing an ankle monitor that tracks my every move. After three years in federal prison and time in a halfway house, I'm experiencing firsthand what federal home confinement actually looks like.
Home confinement isn't house arrest like you see in movies. It's a highly regulated form of federal supervision with strict rules, constant monitoring, and consequences that can send you back to prison immediately. Let me walk you through what nobody tells you about this final phase of federal supervision.
The Ankle Monitor: Your New Roommate
The ankle monitor isn't just a bracelet. It's a GPS tracking device about the size of a thick watch that becomes part of your daily existence. Mine charges for two hours twice daily while I remain within 150 feet of the base unit plugged into my wall.
The device tracks my location continuously. It knows when I leave my approved address, when I return, and every stop I make in between. The battery life means I plan my entire day around charging schedules. I charge it from 6-8 AM while I have coffee and read, then again from 6-8 PM during dinner prep.
Showering requires planning. The monitor is waterproof, but the charging port needs protection. I learned this the hard way when moisture triggered a tamper alert that required an immediate call to my supervising officer. Swimming pools, hot tubs, and long baths are off limits entirely.
The weight becomes background noise after a few weeks, but the psychological impact doesn't fade. Every step reminds you that your freedom is conditional and monitored. Friends notice it. Strangers stare. Explaining it gets easier, but it never stops being a visible reminder of your status in the federal system.
Getting Your Schedule Approved
My probation officer controls my weekly schedule completely. Every destination, every time window, every variation must be approved in advance. I submit my schedule request every Friday for the following week, listing specific addresses and timeframes for work, medical appointments, grocery shopping, and approved activities.
Spontaneity doesn't exist. If my dentist calls to reschedule an appointment, I can't just accept the new time. I must call my probation officer, get verbal approval, then submit a schedule modification form. Emergency situations require immediate contact, but "emergency" has a very specific federal definition.
Work schedules are easier once established. My officer approved my regular work hours and commute route. But overtime requests, business travel, and schedule changes all require advance approval. When my employer asked me to attend a conference in another city, the approval process took three weeks and required extensive documentation.
Religious services, medical appointments, and legal consultations get priority approval. Recreational activities face much stricter scrutiny. I can attend my son's soccer games, but only if I submit the schedule with specific field addresses and game times two weeks in advance.

Where You Can and Cannot Go
Federal home confinement creates an invisible fence around your approved activities. I can only be at approved addresses during approved times. My current approved locations include my home, my workplace, my attorney's office, specific medical providers, one grocery store, one pharmacy, and my place of worship.
The boundaries are precise. My grocery store approval specifies the exact address. I cannot stop at the pharmacy in the same shopping center without separate approval for that address. Taking a different route to work requires advance notification and justification.
Travel restrictions are severe. I cannot leave my federal district without court permission, even for family emergencies. When my father was hospitalized two states away, I needed emergency court approval that took 18 hours to obtain. Interstate travel for any reason requires extensive paperwork and judicial review.
Social visits with family and friends must occur at my residence or at their pre-approved addresses. I cannot meet friends for dinner at restaurants without adding those specific restaurant addresses to my approved locations list. Bars, clubs, and establishments that primarily serve alcohol are completely prohibited.
Public transportation creates complications. My bus and subway routes are approved, but I cannot deviate from those specific lines and stops. When construction closed my normal bus route, I needed immediate approval for alternative transportation before I could get to work.
Mandatory Check-ins and Monitoring
I report to my probation officer weekly, either in person or by phone, depending on her assessment of my compliance level. These aren't casual conversations. She reviews my location data, employment status, financial records, and any incidents or violations from the previous week.
The monitoring system flags unusual activity automatically. If I arrive somewhere five minutes late, if my GPS signal is lost briefly, or if I deviate from approved routes, my officer receives an alert. She doesn't always call immediately, but every deviation gets documented and discussed at my next check-in.
Random home visits are part of the program. My officer can appear at my door unannounced to verify my presence and inspect my living situation. She's visited twice so far, once on a Tuesday evening and once on a Sunday morning. Both visits included inspecting my residence for prohibited items and confirming that only approved residents live there.
Technology glitches become my problem. When my ankle monitor lost GPS signal during a thunderstorm, I had to call the monitoring company immediately and report to my officer the next business day with written documentation of the outage. False alerts require the same response level as real violations until proven otherwise.

Work and Income Restrictions
Employment approval is complex under federal supervision. My job required advance approval from my probation officer, including a background check of my employer and verification of my job responsibilities. Self-employment faces much stricter requirements and ongoing financial reporting obligations.
My work schedule determines my movement window. I'm approved to be at my office Monday through Friday, 8 AM to 6 PM, including a specific commute route and timing. Working late requires advance approval. Business dinners, networking events, and professional conferences all need separate authorization.
Income reporting is mandatory and detailed. I submit monthly financial statements showing all income sources, major expenses, and account balances. My officer reviews these for compliance with restitution payments and to ensure I'm not engaging in prohibited financial activities.
Certain employment sectors are completely off limits. Jobs involving firearms, financial services, or positions of trust face automatic rejection. Technology jobs require extensive documentation if they involve internet access or computer systems, which created complications for my consulting work.
Travel-based employment is nearly impossible. Sales positions requiring regional travel, consulting roles with client visits, or any job requiring overnight business travel faces extensive approval processes that most employers won't accommodate. My career options remain significantly limited even with federal permission to work.
The Psychological Weight of Limited Freedom
The mental impact of home confinement surprises people who think it's easy time compared to prison. You're home, but you're not free. Every movement is tracked, every decision requires permission, and violation consequences include immediate return to federal custody.
Planning anxiety becomes constant. Simple activities like grocery shopping require advance consideration of timing, route, and potential delays. I check traffic apps obsessively and leave early for everything because being late to an approved location triggers automatic alerts.
Social isolation is real despite being home. Friends stop inviting you places because explaining the approval process is exhausting. Spontaneous activities become impossible. You watch life happening around you while managing a complex system of permissions and restrictions.
The ankle monitor creates daily reminders of your status. Getting dressed means accommodating the device. Exercise requires planning around charging schedules. Sleep position adjustments because the monitor is uncomfortable. These small inconveniences accumulate into larger psychological burdens.
Future planning becomes difficult. I can't make vacation reservations, accept wedding invitations in other states, or commit to activities more than a few weeks out because I don't know what approval processes might be required. Living in the immediate present becomes a survival skill.
How It Affects Your Household
Home confinement impacts everyone in your household, not just the supervised person. My family adapted their schedules around my charging times, GPS requirements, and movement restrictions. They understand that spontaneous family outings require advance planning and approvals.
Visitors to our home must be approved. My officer needs names and basic information for anyone who regularly visits our residence. Overnight guests require advance notification. House parties, large gatherings, or events with unknown attendees are prohibited entirely.
Children struggle to understand why dad can't just go somewhere when needed. Explaining that I need permission for activities they take for granted creates uncomfortable conversations. My son learned not to ask me to pick him up from unexpected places because the answer is usually no.
The home base unit requires dedicated space and reliable internet connection. Power outages become emergencies because the monitoring system must remain operational. We invested in a backup power system specifically to maintain monitoring compliance during electrical issues.
Privacy expectations change for the entire household. Random home visits mean everyone must be prepared for unannounced law enforcement presence. Personal items, activities, and conversations happen with the knowledge that federal supervision extends into our private space.
What Happens If You Break the Rules
Violation consequences under federal home confinement are immediate and severe. Technical violations like equipment malfunctions still require immediate reporting and documentation. Substantive violations like unauthorized movement can result in immediate arrest and return to federal custody.
The monitoring system creates evidence of every violation. GPS data shows exact locations and timing. There's no arguing with electronic records when you're five minutes late returning from an approved location or when you deviate from an approved route.
My officer explained the three-strike approach many districts use. Technical violations earn warnings and increased monitoring. Pattern violations result in restriction modifications and possible extended supervision. Serious violations mean immediate revocation and return to prison to serve remaining sentence time.
Good compliance earns minor privileges over time. After two months without violations, my officer approved slightly longer windows for grocery shopping and added a second pharmacy to my approved locations. But these privileges disappear immediately with any violation, making compliance a continuous requirement.
The violation review process offers limited due process compared to traditional criminal proceedings. Administrative hearings move quickly, and the burden of proof favors the monitoring data over personal explanations. Successful violation challenges require documentation and often legal representation.
Home confinement taught me that freedom isn't binary. There are degrees of liberty between prison walls and complete freedom. Understanding these restrictions, accepting their reality, and building compliance systems around them becomes essential for successfully completing federal supervision. The rules are non-negotiable, but following them leads to eventual full freedom. For those entering this phase of federal supervision, preparation and realistic expectations make the difference between successful completion and return to custody.
If you're facing federal charges or supporting someone through the criminal justice system, understanding the full supervision process helps prepare for reentry challenges that extend far beyond prison release. The path to rebuilding life after federal conviction includes many supervised steps, and home confinement represents both significant progress and continued accountability in that journey.
Written By
Ken Gaughan