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Juvenile Defense · · Last reviewed ·

Juvenile Adjudication vs. Conviction: Why It Matters in Texas

School and gavel representing juvenile adjudication
Quick Answer

A Texas juvenile adjudication is a finding that the child engaged in delinquent conduct or conduct indicating a need for supervision. It is technically not a "conviction" under Family Code § 51.13. But adjudications still affect immigration status, federal firearm rights (depending on circumstances), military enlistment, college admissions, and future criminal sentencing.

Many parents are told that a juvenile case "doesn't count" once the child turns 18. That's not accurate. Texas juvenile adjudications carry important — and sometimes permanent — consequences. Understanding the distinction between adjudication and conviction is essential for evaluating plea offers and negotiating outcomes.

Adjudication vs. Conviction: The Statute

Family Code § 51.13(a) provides:

"An order of adjudication or disposition in a proceeding under this title is not a conviction of crime."

This is the statutory foundation for the "juvenile cases don't count" understanding. The follow-on provisions list specific limitations:

The statute creates real protections — but they are narrower than commonly understood.

When Adjudications DO Count

Sentencing in Adult Court

Family Code § 51.13(c) allows adjudications to be used in sentencing for the same person in adult court. Under Penal Code § 12.42, certain juvenile adjudications count as prior convictions for habitual offender enhancement.

Federal Sentencing

The federal Sentencing Guidelines (USSG § 4A1.2(d)) count juvenile adjudications in criminal history, with limitations. Adjudications less than 5 years old at the time of the adult offense can score points.

Immigration

For federal immigration purposes, juvenile adjudications generally do not count as "convictions" under Matter of Devison, 22 I&N Dec. 1362 (BIA 2000). But specific conduct (drug trafficking, certain violent acts) can still trigger inadmissibility.

Federal Firearm Disability

Under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), juvenile adjudications generally do not trigger federal firearm prohibition. But certain serious adjudications under 18 U.S.C. § 922(d)(9) and § 925(a)(1) do.

Military Enlistment

The Department of Defense looks at the underlying conduct, not the adjudication-vs-conviction technicality. Many juvenile adjudications disqualify applicants without a waiver.

College Admissions

Most applications now ask about juvenile adjudications. Failure to disclose — when asked — can be grounds for revocation of admission. Honest disclosure with context generally is the better approach.

Determinate Sentence Adjudications

Family Code § 54.04(d)(3) creates a determinate sentence option for the most serious juvenile offenses (capital murder, sexual assault, aggravated kidnapping). A determinate sentence:

See our determinate sentencing guide for more.

Sealing as the Pathway to True "Non-Conviction"

The most important post-disposition step in any juvenile case is to seal the records. Family Code § 58.253 provides automatic sealing for some adjudications and petition-based sealing for others.

Once records are sealed:

See our sealing guide for the procedures and timelines.

Plea Strategy: Avoiding Adjudication

The defense priority in many cases is to avoid adjudication entirely through:

None of these results in an adjudication, and most can be sealed promptly.

What to Do If Your Child Is Charged

  1. Do not let your child speak to police without a parent and an attorney present. Texas allows juvenile statements only with strict procedural safeguards under Family Code § 51.095.
  2. Demand a magistrate warning before any juvenile interview — required by § 51.095 for any custodial statement to be admissible.
  3. Preserve school records, social media, and texts — but do not delete anything.
  4. Do not contact alleged victims, witnesses, or co-respondents — bond and probation conditions usually prohibit it.
  5. Engage juvenile defense counsel immediately — call (214) 466-1398. We handle Collin, Dallas, and Denton county juvenile cases.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a juvenile adjudication the same as a conviction?

No — Family Code § 51.13(a) says adjudications are not convictions. But many collateral consequences still apply: federal sentencing enhancement, military enlistment, college admissions, and immigration impact for some conduct.

Will my child have a "criminal record"?

Yes, but a juvenile record — separate from adult criminal records. Juvenile records are confidential under Family Code Chapter 58 but not automatically secret. Active sealing is required to make them effectively private.

Can a juvenile adjudication affect immigration?

Generally not as a "conviction" for immigration purposes — Matter of Devison. But the underlying conduct can still trigger inadmissibility for drug offenses, sexual offenses, and certain violent acts.

Will a juvenile adjudication affect college applications?

Most applications ask about juvenile adjudications. Failure to disclose when asked is grounds for revocation. Honest disclosure with context is generally the better approach.

Can a juvenile adjudication be sealed?

Yes. Family Code § 58.253 provides automatic sealing for some adjudications and petition-based sealing for others. Once sealed, the juvenile can generally deny the records.

Speak With a Frisco Criminal Defense Attorney

If you or a loved one is facing juvenile defense charges in Frisco, Collin County, or anywhere in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, the time to act is now. L and L Law Group attorneys are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Call (214) 466-1398 for a free, confidential consultation, or submit your case online and a licensed attorney will contact you directly.


This article is general information, not legal advice. Texas and federal criminal law are complex and fact-specific — please consult a licensed attorney about your particular situation. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

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