Title 18 › Part PART II— - CRIMINAL PROCEDURE › Chapter CHAPTER 227— - SENTENCES › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER C— - FINES › § 3572
When a court decides whether to fine someone, how much, and how to set up payment, it must look at the person’s money and earning ability and eight other things. These include the burden the fine would put on the defendant and anyone who depends on them; money others lost because of the crime; whether restitution is ordered and how much; taking away any illegal profits from the crime; expected government costs for jail or supervision; whether the defendant can shift the cost to consumers; and, for organizations, the size of the group and what it did to discipline responsible people and stop the problem. A fine can later be changed, corrected, or appealed under the normal rules. If a conviction also requires restitution to a victim (not the United States), the court must only add a fine if it will not stop the defendant from being able to pay that restitution. Payments are due right away unless the court sets a specific date or allows equal monthly payments or another schedule. The court must set the shortest reasonable time to pay in full. The judgment must make the defendant tell the court about any big change in their finances. After such notice, the court can change the schedule or demand full payment. The court may not add an alternate punishment to be used if the fine is not paid at sentencing. For organizations, people who are allowed to spend the group’s money must pay from the group’s assets when the organization is ordered to pay; if the order is against a director, officer, shareholder, employee, or agent, the payment cannot come from the organization’s assets unless state law allows it. If a fine is stayed, the court must, except in rare cases, make the defendant put the money in the court’s registry, give a bond or security, or stop the defendant from moving or wasting assets. Delinquent means a payment is more than 30 days late. Default means a payment is delinquent for more than 90 days; in that case the whole fine or restitution becomes due within 30 days after notice, subject to section 3613A.
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Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 3572
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73