The Bureau of Prisons has a 98% denial rate for administrative remedy requests. Here's why — and why filing correctly still matters more than ever.
According to BOP data, the Bureau of Prisons denies approximately 98% of all administrative remedy requests at every level of review. Only about less than 1% of grievances result in any favorable outcome for the inmate.
The BOP has every structural incentive to deny grievances. A denial costs them nothing. A grant costs them accountability, policy changes, or money. The less-than-1% favorable outcome rate is not a surprise — it is the expected result of a process run by the institution being complained about.
Here is the critical distinction: the purpose of filing a grievance is not to win the grievance. It is to preserve your right to go to court.
Under the PLRA, no federal prisoner can file a lawsuit about prison conditions until they have exhausted all available administrative remedies. A grievance that is filed correctly and denied at every level is not a failure — it is a completed process and the legal foundation you need to take your complaint to a federal court.
The less-than-1% favorable outcome rate is a reason to be precise, not to give up. The administrative remedy process is the mandatory gateway to federal court. Complete it correctly — every step, every deadline, every form — so that when the BOP says no, you are ready to take the next step.
A Message from Our Founder
Why the BOP Denies 98% of Grievances — A Message from Our Founder
4–5 minute narration · Founder Matt Dispensa
Why the BOP Denies 98% of Grievances
A narration by Matt Dispensa, Founder · 6 min 38 sec
Our team of formerly incarcerated advocates and contributors with BOP and DOC experience gives you the right forms, deadline tracking, and step-by-step instructions — so you never miss a deadline.
Know someone who needs this?
Every time you share this article, another family learns about their rights before it's too late.
Related Articles
Most federal prison lawsuits are dismissed before they ever reach a jury. Here are the five most com…
Before a federal inmate can sue the Bureau of Prisons, they must first exhaust the internal complain…
Federal courts require inmates to 'exhaust' all administrative remedies before filing a lawsuit. Her…