How Much Does an Ankle Monitor Cost? Daily Fees, Equipment & Total Cost Breakdown [2026]

How Much Does an Ankle Monitor Cost? Daily Fees, Equipment & Total Cost Breakdown [2026]

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Ankle monitor cost daily fees and pricing guide

How Much Does an Ankle Monitor Cost in 2026?

Ankle monitor costs vary widely depending on the monitoring program, jurisdiction, device type, and whether the individual or the supervising agency pays. For agencies purchasing equipment, understanding the full cost structure — from per-unit hardware pricing to ongoing monitoring fees — is critical for procurement decisions and budget planning.

NIJ offender tracking system architecture diagram
Notional Offender Monitoring System — the four-subsystem architecture (offender device, in-house monitoring, vendor data center, officer interface) that underpins all modern GPS ankle monitoring programs. Source: NIJ Market Survey of Location-Based Offender Tracking Systems, JHU/APL (2016).

According to the National Institute of Justice (NIJ), electronic monitoring through GPS ankle monitors costs between $5 and $25 per day, compared to incarceration costs averaging $35,000 per year ($95/day). This makes ankle monitoring approximately 75-95% less expensive than jail time.

Daily Monitoring Fees by Program Type

Monitored individuals in most U.S. jurisdictions pay a daily supervision fee. These fees vary significantly:

Program TypeDaily Fee RangeMonthly Cost
GPS Continuous Tracking$8 – $25/day$240 – $750
RF (Home Detention)$5 – $15/day$150 – $450
Alcohol Monitoring (SCRAM)$10 – $20/day$300 – $600
Pretrial GPS Monitoring$8 – $20/day$240 – $600

Equipment Costs: Purchasing vs. Leasing

Agencies face a fundamental decision between purchasing equipment outright and leasing devices through a monitoring service provider.

Purchase Model (Agency-Owned Equipment)

  • One-piece GPS ankle monitors: $800 – $2,500 per unit (one-time cost)
  • Two-piece systems (ankle tag + tracking unit): $600 – $1,800 per set
  • RF monitoring base stations: $300 – $800 each
  • Monthly cellular/data fees: $15 – $40 per device
  • Software platform license: $5,000 – $50,000/year depending on scale

Lease/Service Model (Vendor-Managed)

  • Per-device monthly fee: $150 – $400/month (includes hardware, software, and cellular)
  • No upfront capital expenditure
  • Includes warranty and replacements

State-by-State Cost Comparison

StateTypical Daily FeeWho Pays
Florida$8 – $15Defendant
Texas$10 – $20Defendant
California$12 – $25Mixed
Georgia$8 – $12Defendant
New York$0 (many programs)Government funded

Hidden Costs to Consider

Beyond the daily monitoring fee, several additional costs impact the total cost of ankle monitor programs:

Track Group ReliAlert XC3 GPS ankle monitor with charging cradle
Track Group ReliAlert XC3 one-piece GPS ankle monitor with proprietary charging cradle. Source: NIJ Market Survey of Location-Based Offender Tracking Systems, JHU/APL (2016).
  • Installation/activation fee: $50 – $200 one-time
  • Removal fee: $25 – $100
  • Replacement costs for damaged/lost devices: $500 – $2,500
  • Charger replacement: $25 – $75
  • Late payment penalties: Varies by provider

Total Cost of Ownership (TCO): EM vs. Incarceration

The economic case for electronic monitoring is compelling when compared to incarceration:

  • Average annual incarceration cost: $35,000 – $60,000 per inmate
  • Average annual GPS monitoring cost: $3,650 – $9,125 ($10-25/day)
  • Cost savings per offender: $25,000 – $50,000/year

According to research from Florida’s Department of Corrections, electronic monitoring programs have demonstrated a 31% reduction in recidivism while costing a fraction of incarceration. For agencies managing hundreds or thousands of monitored individuals, the cumulative savings are substantial.

How Technology Affects Cost

Modern one-piece GPS ankle monitors like the CO-EYE ONE offer significant TCO advantages over traditional two-piece systems:

  • 7-day battery life reduces charging infrastructure costs and officer check-ins
  • Fiber optic anti-tamper detection with zero false positives eliminates costly false alarm responses
  • One-piece design eliminates separate tracking unit costs and reduces loss/damage
  • Snap-on installation (<3 seconds) reduces officer time per enrollment
  • IP68 waterproof rating reduces damage-related replacements

When evaluating GPS ankle monitor costs, agencies should request a comprehensive TCO analysis that includes hardware depreciation, cellular fees, false alarm response costs, replacement rates, and officer labor. Contact our sales team for a detailed cost comparison.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does an ankle monitor cost per day?

GPS ankle monitor daily fees typically range from $5 to $25 per day, depending on the monitoring program, device type, and jurisdiction. RF-only home detention monitors are usually cheaper ($5-$15/day), while GPS continuous tracking costs more ($8-$25/day).

Who pays for ankle monitors?

In most U.S. states, the monitored individual pays the daily monitoring fee. However, some jurisdictions (like New York) fund monitoring programs through government budgets. Indigent defendants may qualify for reduced fees or fee waivers.

How much does a GPS ankle monitor cost to buy?

One-piece GPS ankle monitors cost between $800 and $2,500 per unit for agency purchases. Two-piece systems (ankle tag + tracking device) range from $600 to $1,800 per set. Most agencies also need to budget for monthly cellular data fees ($15-$40/device) and monitoring software.

Is an ankle monitor cheaper than jail?

Yes, significantly. GPS ankle monitoring costs approximately $3,650-$9,125 per year compared to $35,000-$60,000 per year for incarceration. Electronic monitoring saves taxpayers 75-95% compared to jail, while research shows a 31% reduction in recidivism.

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