Reentry Programs in Maryland

Last Updated on: April 27, 2026

Finding reentry help in Maryland can be confusing because resources are spread across state agencies, county offices, nonprofits, faith based groups, housing programs, employment programs, and local community organizations. This page brings the main options together so returning citizens, families, probation clients, parole clients, and people preparing for release can find help faster.

If you are also trying to find work, housing, or financial help, see our guides on companies that hire felons, felon friendly apartments and housing, and financial help for felons.

Notice: You may also find our “Reentry Survival Guide for Felons” helpful in addition to this page.


Reentry Programs In Maryland

Use this directory first if you need a reentry program, case management, job help, transitional support, mentoring, or a local resource referral. Some programs serve all of Maryland, while others mainly serve Baltimore, Prince George’s County, Montgomery County, Washington County, or nearby Washington, DC communities.

Maryland Reentry Resource Center

Address: 77 West Street, Suite 110, Annapolis, MD 21401
Phone: (410) 429 0107
Best for: Returning citizens who need reentry planning, resource navigation, and support after incarceration.
What it offers: Reentry support, resource connections, education, advocacy, and tools to help people rebuild after release.

211 Maryland Reentry Resources

Address: Statewide online and phone resource
Phone: Dial 211
Best for: Anyone in Maryland who needs a local reentry resource by location.
What it offers: A searchable reentry resource database, employment links, community referrals, and 24 hour help through 211.

Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services Reentry Services

Address: 6776 Reisterstown Road, Suite 218, Baltimore, MD 21215
Phone: (410) 585 3300
Best for: People leaving Maryland state custody who need prerelease planning and reentry coordination.
What it offers: Reentry planning, treatment coordination, education support, workforce connections, and links to community based services.

Maryland Department of Labor Reentry Initiative

Address: Statewide American Job Center network
Phone: Contact your local American Job Center
Best for: Job seekers with criminal records who need employment help.
What it offers: Reentry employment specialists, American Job Center referrals, workforce help, and information about the Federal Bonding Program.

Return Home Baltimore

Address: Baltimore area resource directory
Phone: Use the website contact form
Best for: Returning citizens in Baltimore who need help finding local services.
What it offers: Searchable resources for housing, food, job training, government IDs, legal help, mental health, substance use recovery, family services, and wraparound support.

Maryland Correctional Enterprises C.A.R.E.S. Program

Address: 7275 Waterloo Road, Jessup, MD 20794
Phone: (410) 540 5400
Best for: Program participants preparing for release who need job readiness and life skills support.
What it offers: Employment readiness, financial literacy, transitional planning, cognitive behavior support, life skills, trauma support, and reentry preparation.

No Struggle No Success, Inc.

Address: 3000 Homewood Avenue, Suite 7136, Baltimore, MD 21218
Phone: (443) 869 6997
Best for: Youth and adults returning from incarceration in the Baltimore area.
What it offers: Reentry planning, family support, resource navigation, financial literacy, community support, and services designed to reduce recidivism.

Life After Release

Address: 4719 Silver Hill Road, Suitland, MD 20746
Phone: (240) 200 4472
Best for: People in Prince George’s County and nearby communities who need advocacy, legal support, and community based reentry help.
What it offers: Reentry advocacy, expungement related events, court support, community organizing, and help for people impacted by incarceration.

The National Reentry Network

Address: 6202 Sligo Mill Road NE, Washington, DC 20011
Phone: (202) 584 1000
Best for: Returning citizens in the DC and Maryland region who need reentry support and referrals.
What it offers: Reentry support, workforce related help, community referrals, and support for people coming home from incarceration.

Voices for a Second Chance

Address: 1420 N Street NW, Washington, DC 20005
Phone: (202) 544 2131
Best for: Returning citizens in the Washington, DC and Maryland area who need transitional support.
What it offers: Reentry planning, transportation support, housing referrals, employment help, family reconnection, and basic needs support.

CSOSA Reentry and Sanctions Center

Address: 1900 Massachusetts Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20003
Phone: (202) 442 1100
Best for: People under CSOSA supervision who need structured reentry support in the DC region.
What it offers: Assessment, treatment, cognitive behavioral programming, employment readiness, life skills, and transition planning.

The Mayor’s Office on Returning Citizen Affairs

Address: 2100 Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue SE, Suite 100, Washington, DC 20020
Phone: (202) 715 7670
Best for: Returning citizens in the Washington, DC area who need government navigation and referrals.
What it offers: Reentry referrals, identification support, workforce connections, housing related referrals, family support, and public benefit navigation.

Montgomery County Pre Trial Services

Address: 255 Rockville Pike, Rockville, MD 20850
Phone: (240) 777 5400
Best for: People involved in the Montgomery County pretrial system.
What it offers: Court related supervision, referrals, monitoring, and support services connected to pretrial release.

Montgomery County Correctional Facility

Address: 22880 Whelan Lane, Boyds, MD 20841
Phone: (240) 773 9700
Best for: People leaving Montgomery County custody who need local correctional and transition information.
What it offers: Correctional services, release related information, programming, and referrals connected to Montgomery County resources.

Montgomery County Detention Center

Address: 1307 Seven Locks Road, Rockville, MD 20854
Phone: (240) 777 9960
Best for: People in Montgomery County custody and families looking for detention and release related information.
What it offers: Detention services, intake, case related information, and connections to county correctional resources.

Professional Outplacement Assistance Center

Address: 312 Marshall Avenue, 6th Floor, Laurel, MD 20707
Phone: (301) 929 6880
Best for: Job seekers who need resume, career, and employment search support.
What it offers: Job search help, career workshops, employment counseling, resume assistance, and workforce resources.

FailSafe ERA

Address: 1972 William Street, Fredericksburg, VA 22401
Phone: (540) 479 3021
Best for: Returning citizens and families in the wider Mid Atlantic region who need reentry support.
What it offers: Reentry support, family services, mentoring, referrals, and employment related help for people impacted by incarceration.

Halfway Houses and Transitional Housing in Maryland

Housing is often the first problem to solve after release. A person with a stable place to sleep has a better chance of keeping a job, reporting to supervision, staying sober, and following through with appointments. For more help with landlord denials and applications, read our guide to felon friendly apartments and housing.

Volunteers of America Chesapeake and Carolinas Residential Reentry Center

Address: 5000 East Monument Street, Baltimore, MD 21205
Phone: (410) 276 5880
Best for: Men and women returning from the federal system who are referred through approved channels.
What it offers: Temporary housing, person centered reentry services, transition support, and services designed to reduce recidivism.

180 Homeshare

Address: Baltimore, MD
Phone: Contact through website
Best for: People recently released from incarceration who need a housing option in Baltimore.
What it offers: Home sharing matches between reentry home seekers and community hosts.

The Bridge Reentry Program

Address: Maryland service area
Phone: Contact through website
Best for: People looking for reentry support, housing referrals, and community based help.
What it offers: Reentry support and resource connections for people rebuilding after incarceration.

Oxford House Maryland

Address: Multiple sober living homes across Maryland
Phone: Use the website house locator
Best for: People in recovery who need sober shared housing.
What it offers: Peer supported sober living homes, accountability, recovery focused housing, and a structured living environment.

Damascus House Community Development Corporation

Address: 2403 38th Street SE, Washington, DC 20020
Phone: (202) 388 2534
Best for: People in the DC and Maryland region who need transitional housing and recovery support.
What it offers: Transitional housing, recovery support, mentoring, and community based services.

Opportunity Industrialization Center of Washington, DC

Address: 251 West Street, Annapolis, MD 21401
Phone: (443) 951 5645
Best for: Returning citizens who need workforce help and community support.
What it offers: Job readiness, career support, training connections, and reentry related referrals.

Housing Solutions

If a program is full, ask for a referral list instead of stopping there. Many housing programs know other shelters, sober living homes, transitional houses, and church based options that are not easy to find online.

United Way 211 Maryland

Address: Statewide phone and online resource
Phone: Dial 211
Best for: Emergency housing, shelter referrals, food, utility help, and local assistance.
What it offers: Local referrals for housing, shelter, food, mental health, public benefits, and crisis support.

Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development

Address: 7800 Harkins Road, Lanham, MD 20706
Phone: (301) 429 7400
Best for: People looking for statewide housing programs and rental assistance information.
What it offers: Housing program information, affordable housing resources, rental assistance links, and community development programs.

Maryland Legal Aid

Address: 500 East Lexington Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Phone: (410) 951 7777
Best for: People facing eviction, benefits problems, family law issues, or civil legal barriers.
What it offers: Free civil legal help for eligible Maryland residents, including housing, benefits, consumer, family, and expungement related help.

Emergency Food, Clothing, and Shelter

For many people coming home, the first few days are about basics: food, clothing, a phone, transportation, shelter, and documents. These resources can help while you work on longer term housing and employment. For more options, see our page on emergency financial help for felons.

Maryland Department of Human Services

Address: 311 West Saratoga Street, Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: (800) 332 6347
Best for: Food assistance, cash assistance, child support, and emergency help.
What it offers: SNAP, cash assistance, energy help, child support services, emergency assistance, and local Department of Social Services offices.

Maryland Food Bank

Address: 2200 Halethorpe Farms Road, Baltimore, MD 21227
Phone: (410) 737 8282
Best for: People who need food pantry referrals and emergency food help.
What it offers: Food distribution, pantry search tools, partner programs, and emergency food resources across Maryland.

Baltimore City Mayor’s Office of Homeless Services

Address: 7 East Redwood Street, 5th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21202
Phone: (410) 396 5555
Best for: People in Baltimore who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.
What it offers: Homeless services coordination, shelter resources, outreach, housing support, and emergency assistance connections.

Catholic Charities of Baltimore

Address: 320 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: (667) 600 2000
Best for: People who need shelter, food, family support, employment help, or recovery related services.
What it offers: Emergency services, shelters, meals, employment programs, family support, and behavioral health services.

Helping Up Mission

Address: 1029 East Baltimore Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Phone: (410) 675 7500
Best for: Men and women who need shelter, meals, recovery support, and long term restoration services.
What it offers: Meals, shelter, addiction recovery, spiritual support, case management, education, and workforce development.

Free or Low Cost Healthcare

Healthcare matters after release, especially if you need medication, mental health care, addiction treatment, dental care, or Medicaid enrollment. If you are applying for jobs, staying healthy can also help you keep appointments and avoid setbacks.

Maryland Health Connection

Address: Statewide online health insurance marketplace
Phone: (855) 642 8572
Best for: People who need Medicaid or low cost health insurance after release.
What it offers: Medicaid enrollment, private health plan enrollment, financial assistance screening, and local navigator help.

Maryland Department of Health Behavioral Health Administration

Address: 55 Wade Avenue, Catonsville, MD 21228
Phone: (410) 402 8300
Best for: People who need mental health or substance use treatment resources.
What it offers: Behavioral health program information, crisis resources, treatment referrals, and statewide service coordination.

Baltimore Crisis Response, Inc.

Address: 5124 Greenwich Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21229
Phone: (410) 433 5175
Best for: People in Baltimore who need crisis mental health or substance use support.
What it offers: Crisis response, hotline support, mobile crisis services, substance use support, and referrals.

Healthcare for the Homeless Baltimore

Address: 421 Fallsway, Baltimore, MD 21202
Phone: (410) 837 5533
Best for: People experiencing homelessness who need medical care, behavioral health care, or case management.
What it offers: Primary care, dental care, behavioral health, addiction services, case management, and housing support.

Legal Documents, IDs, and Expungement Help

A missing ID, birth certificate, Social Security card, or unresolved legal issue can block employment and housing. Start on documents early. If your criminal record is creating barriers, read our guide on expungement and record sealing.

Maryland Volunteer Lawyers Service

Address: 201 North Charles Street, Suite 1400, Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: (410) 547 6537
Best for: Low income Maryland residents who need civil legal help.
What it offers: Legal help with expungement, family law, housing, consumer issues, tax problems, estate planning, and other civil legal matters.

Maryland Courts Expungement Information

Address: Statewide court resource
Phone: Contact your local Maryland courthouse
Best for: People who want to understand Maryland expungement rules and forms.
What it offers: Expungement information, forms, filing instructions, court help center links, and guidance on record cleanup.

Maryland Motor Vehicle Administration

Address: 6601 Ritchie Highway NE, Glen Burnie, MD 21062
Phone: (410) 768 7000
Best for: People who need a Maryland ID, driver’s license, or driving record help.
What it offers: State ID cards, driver’s licenses, license reinstatement information, vehicle services, and document requirements.

Enoch Pratt Free Library Social Worker in the Library

Address: 400 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: (410) 396 5430
Best for: Baltimore residents who need help finding documents, benefits, shelter, and community resources.
What it offers: Social service referrals, document help, benefit navigation, housing referrals, and resource support through the library system.

Financial Help

Financial help after release may include SNAP, cash assistance, utility help, Medicaid, phone support, transportation help, child support help, and job placement services. Avoid any company that promises guaranteed grants or loans for a fee. Start with official programs and local nonprofits first. For more help, read loans and grants for felons and small business loans for felons.

Maryland Benefits

Address: Statewide online benefits portal
Phone: (800) 332 6347
Best for: People applying for SNAP, cash assistance, and other public benefits.
What it offers: Online applications for food assistance, cash assistance, energy help, and other Maryland benefit programs.

Maryland Office of Home Energy Programs

Address: Apply online or through local Department of Social Services offices
Phone: (800) 332 6347
Best for: People who need help with utility bills or energy costs.
What it offers: Energy bill assistance, arrearage help, heating assistance, and utility related support.

Cash Campaign of Maryland

Address: 575 South Charles Street, Suite 500, Baltimore, MD 21201
Phone: (410) 528 8006
Best for: People who need tax help, financial coaching, and credit building resources.
What it offers: Free tax preparation referrals, financial education, credit building support, and money management resources.

Employment Help for Felons in Maryland

Many Maryland reentry programs can help with job readiness, but you should also contact American Job Centers and programs that work directly with employers. If you are applying on your own, read our list of Jobs For Felons and our guide to jobs for felons.

Maryland Workforce Exchange

Address: Statewide online employment system
Phone: Contact your local American Job Center
Best for: Job seekers who need job listings, workforce services, and employment tools.
What it offers: Job search tools, resume posting, training information, employer connections, and workforce resources.

American Job Centers in Maryland

Address: Multiple locations statewide
Phone: Contact your nearest American Job Center
Best for: Returning citizens who need local job search help.
What it offers: Resume help, career counseling, training referrals, job leads, workshops, unemployment help, and employer connections.

Goodwill Industries of the Chesapeake

Address: 222 East Redwood Street, Baltimore, MD 21202
Phone: (410) 837 1800
Best for: Job seekers who need workforce training, job readiness, and support services.
What it offers: Employment programs, training, placement support, community services, and help for people facing barriers to work.

Center for Urban Families

Address: 2201 North Monroe Street, Baltimore, MD 21217
Phone: (410) 367 5691
Best for: Baltimore residents who need employment, fatherhood, and family stability support.
What it offers: Workforce development, job readiness, family strengthening, coaching, and support for people facing employment barriers.

Living Classrooms Foundation

Address: 802 South Caroline Street, Baltimore, MD 21231
Phone: (410) 685 0295
Best for: Young adults and adults who need workforce training and support overcoming barriers.
What it offers: Job training, workforce development, education programs, community support, and career pathway services.

Go Reentry Specialists

Address: 100 Beech Drive, Glen Burnie, MD 21061
Phone: (814) 641 4281
Best for: Returning citizens who need reentry coaching and job related support.
What it offers: Reentry support, employment guidance, mentoring, and resource connections.

READY Center

Address: 1901 D Street SE, Washington, DC 20003
Phone: Contact through DC Department of Corrections
Best for: People returning to the DC and Maryland region who need immediate reentry support.
What it offers: One stop reentry referrals for identification, employment, housing, healthcare, benefits, clothing, and transportation.

Substance Abuse Help

Substance abuse treatment can be a major part of successful reentry. If you are on supervision, ask whether a program is approved before enrolling. If you are in danger of relapse or overdose, call for help immediately.

Maryland Behavioral Health Treatment Locator

Address: Statewide resource
Phone: (410) 402 8300
Best for: People looking for substance use or mental health treatment in Maryland.
What it offers: Treatment information, referrals, crisis resources, and behavioral health system navigation.

SAMHSA National Helpline

Address: National phone resource
Phone: (800) 662 4357
Best for: People who need confidential substance use or mental health treatment referrals.
What it offers: Free confidential referrals for treatment, recovery support, mental health help, and substance use services.

Tuerk House

Address: 730 Ashburton Street, Baltimore, MD 21216
Phone: (410) 233 0684
Best for: People who need addiction treatment and recovery services in Baltimore.
What it offers: Residential treatment, outpatient services, withdrawal management, medication assisted treatment, and recovery support.

Mountain Manor Treatment Center

Address: 3800 Frederick Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21229
Phone: (410) 233 1400
Best for: People who need substance use treatment, mental health support, or dual diagnosis care.
What it offers: Residential treatment, outpatient treatment, detox services, medication assisted treatment, and behavioral health care.

Other Helpful Resources

If you need more than reentry programs, these guides may help:

Notice: You may also find our “Reentry Survival Guide for Felons” helpful in addition to this page.


What Makes a Good Reentry Program

A good reentry program does more than hand someone a flyer and send them away. The best programs help with the real problems that usually hit first after release, like housing, ID, transportation, job search, food, clothing, recovery support, and staying on track with parole or probation. A strong program should feel practical. It should help you solve immediate problems while also helping you build toward long term stability.

Good reentry programs also have structure and real follow through. That usually means staff who return calls, clear intake steps, honest answers about what they can and cannot do, and connections to other services when they cannot help directly. The strongest programs often combine several things at once, like case management, mentoring, job readiness, housing help, recovery support, and community referrals. Programs that only offer one small service can still be useful, but the best ones usually help you build an actual plan.


Tips for Choosing a Reentry Program

Call before you go if you can. Ask what services they actually offer, who qualifies, what documents you need, whether they help people right after release, and whether they have waiting lists. This can save time and avoid wasted trips.

Ask specific questions. Do not just ask if they help with reentry. Ask if they help with housing, jobs, IDs, clothing, transportation, recovery, legal referrals, or case management. A lot of places sound helpful until you find out they only offer one narrow service.

Look for programs that connect you to other help. Even if one program cannot solve everything, a good one should know where to send you next. That matters a lot in reentry because most people need more than one kind of support.

Do not judge a program only by its website. Some very helpful programs have weak websites. Some polished websites do not actually provide much real help. What matters most is whether they answer the phone, explain the process clearly, and help people solve real problems.

If a program is full, ask what to do next. Ask if they know another program, another shelter, a workforce office, a church ministry, or a local county resource that may help sooner. One good referral can make a big difference.

Keep your paperwork together. If possible, carry your ID, release paperwork, Social Security card, birth certificate copies, parole or probation paperwork, resume, and any referral forms in one folder. That makes it easier to apply for multiple programs fast.

Follow up. A lot of people call once and stop. Reentry services can be overloaded. Sometimes the difference between getting help and not getting help is calling back, showing up on time, and staying on their radar.


Disclaimer

This page is for general informational purposes only. Programs, addresses, phone numbers, services, and eligibility rules can change. Always verify details directly with the organization before relying on them. Nothing on this page should be considered legal advice.