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BP-8, BP-9, BP-10, BP-11: What Each Form Does and When to File It

8 min readFebruary 12, 2026

A plain-English breakdown of each form in the federal administrative remedy process — what it does, where it goes, and when you have to file it.

The BP-8: Informal Resolution

The BP-8 is the first step — an informal request to your unit counselor. There is no fixed regulatory deadline for the BP-8 itself, but it must be completed before you can file the BP-9. The purpose is to give the facility a chance to resolve the issue informally.

Keep a written record of your BP-8 request and the counselor's response, even if the response is verbal. You will need to reference this when you file the BP-9.

The BP-9: Formal Complaint to the Warden

The BP-9 is the first formal written complaint. It must be filed within 20 calendar days of the incident (28 CFR § 542.14). The Warden has 20 days to respond. If they don't respond within 20 days, you can treat the non-response as a denial and move to the BP-10.

The BP-9 is the most critical form in the process. Missing the 20-day deadline is the most common reason cases get dismissed.

The BP-10: Regional Appeal

If the Warden denies your BP-9, you can appeal to the Regional Director. The BP-10 must be filed within 20 days of the Warden's response. You must include one complete copy of your BP-9 and the Warden's response. We strongly recommend sending via certified mail with return receipt as proof of timely filing, though it is not required by regulation.

The BP-11: Central Office Appeal

The BP-11 is the final administrative step. It must be filed within 30 days of the Regional Director's response. Send to the BOP's Central Office in Washington, D.C. Once the BP-11 is complete (or the response deadline passes), you have exhausted your administrative remedies and can file in federal court.

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