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No-Contact Orders in Houston: Rules & How to Lift One

PUBLISHED ON: January 6, 2020    LAST MODIFIED ON: May 19, 2026

You’ve Been Ordered to Have No Contact โ€” Here’s What That Means

You just got out of Harris County jail after being arrested for domestic violence or a related charge. The judge set your bond and gave you a list of conditions you have to follow.

One of them says: “No contact with [victim’s name].”

You’re probably thinking:

  • “Can I just send one text to apologize?”
  • “What if they contact me first?”
  • “Can I have my mom talk to them for me?”
  • “What if we need to discuss our kids?”

The answer to all of these is NO.

A no-contact order is a direct command from a judge. It’s not a suggestion. It’s not negotiable. And violating it โ€” even once, even accidentally, even if the other person wants you to โ€” is a separate crime that will get you immediately re-arrested.

This guide explains exactly what you can and cannot do, what happens if you violate the order, and how an attorney can help you get it modified or removed.

On This Page

  • What You Need to Know Right Now
  • What Is a No-Contact Order in Harris County?
  • The Strict Rules: What “No Contact” Actually Means
  • What Happens If You Violate the Order
  • Can You Get the Order Changed or Removed?
  • Why You Need an Attorney Now
  • Your Questions Answered
  • Get Help Now

What You Need to Know Right Now

Quick Answer: A no-contact order in Harris County means absolutely zero communication with the alleged victimโ€”no calls, texts, social media contact, messages through friends, or going near their home or work. Violating it is a new criminal charge that gets you re-arrested, your bond revoked, and your original case much harder to win. The order stays in effect until your case is resolved or a judge modifies it.

Served No Contact Order in Houston Texas

The bottom line:

What “no contact” means:

  • No calls, texts, emails, or messages of any kind
  • No social media contact (likes, comments, DMs, tags)
  • No going to their home, work or school
  • No sending messages through other people
  • No contact even if THEY reach out to you first

What happens if you violate:

  • Immediate re-arrest
  • New criminal charge (Class A misdemeanor)
  • Original bond revoked โ€” you sit in jail until trial
  • Higher bond amount if you get out again
  • Your original case becomes much harder to win

How long it lasts:

  • Bond condition: Until your case is resolved (months to over a year)
  • Emergency protective order: 31-91 days typically
  • Full protective order: Up to 2 years or longer

Can it be changed?

  • Yes, but only by a judge
  • Requires filing a formal motion
  • Victim cannot drop it on their own
  • Attorney must present compelling reasons

Critical fact: Even if the alleged victim wants to talk to you, texts you first, or says they’ll tell the judge you didn’t violate โ€” DO NOT RESPOND. The order applies to YOU, not them.

What Is a No-Contact Order in Harris County?

A no-contact order is a specific condition of your pretrial bond set by a judge in Harris County. It’s designed to protect the alleged victim and prevent witness intimidation while your criminal case is pending.

It is not optional. It is a direct order from the court.

Three Types of Orders (All Mean “No Contact”)

1. No-Contact Bond Condition

What it is: The most common type. When you’re released from jail on bond, the judge adds this as a condition of your release.

Who issues it: Criminal court judge at your first appearance

How long it lasts: Until your case is completely resolved (dismissal, plea, or trial verdict)

What it covers: Usually the alleged victim, and sometimes their home, workplace, and family members

2. Magistrate’s Order of Emergency Protection (MOEP)

What it is: A short-term emergency order issued immediately after arrest for serious family violence cases.

Who issues it: Magistrate judge (often right after you’re arrested)

How long it lasts: Typically 31-61 days, can be extended to 91 days in certain cases

What it covers: Same as bond condition โ€” no contact with victim

3. Protective Order (Civil)

What it is: A longer-term order requested by the alleged victim through family court. This is separate from your criminal case.

Who issues it: Family court judge after a hearing

How long it lasts: Up to 2 years typically; can be longer (even lifetime) in cases involving serious bodily injury, sexual assault, or stalking

What it covers: Often more detailedโ€”specific distances from victim’s home/work, surrender of firearms, etc.

Important: You might have MORE THAN ONE of these at the same time. You must follow all of them.

Type

Who Issues

How Long

Criminal or Civil

Bond Condition

Criminal judge

Until case

Criminal

Emergency Order (MOEP)

Magistrate

31-91 days

Criminal

Protective Order

Family court

Up to 2 years+

Civil

All three mean the same thing: NO CONTACT.

The Strict Rules: What “No Contact” Actually Means

The most dangerous mistake people make is underestimating how broadly “contact” is defined by Houston courts.

It means ZERO communication. Direct or indirect.

What You Absolutely Cannot Do

Direct Contact (Obviously Prohibited):

Phone/messaging:

  • Calling their number
  • Texting them
  • Emailing them
  • Messaging on WhatsApp, Snapchat, Facebook Messenger, Instagram DMs, or any app

Social media:

  • Sending them a direct message
  • Commenting on their posts
  • “Liking” or reacting to their photos/posts
  • Tagging them in anything
  • Sending a friend or follow request
  • Viewing their stories (some apps show who viewed)

In person:

  • Going to their home
  • Going to their workplace
  • Going to their school
  • Going to places you know they’ll be
  • “Accidentally” running into them

Physical contact:

  • Sending letters
  • Sending gifts
  • Leaving items at their door

Indirect Contact (Also Prohibited โ€” People Don’t Realize This)

Using other people:

  • Asking your mom to call them for you
  • Having a friend deliver a message
  • Getting your kids to pass along what you want to say

Public messages clearly directed at them:

  • Posting on your own Facebook: “I’m sorry. I know you’ll see this.”
  • Tweeting something like “I just want to talk to you”
  • Instagram story clearly meant for them to see

Creating new accounts:

  • Making a fake Instagram to message them
  • Using a different phone number to text
  • Email from a new address

The test: If your action is intended to communicate a message to the protected person, it’s a violation. Intent matters.

“But What If…?” Scenarios

“What if they text me first?” DO NOT RESPOND. The order applies to you, not them. Save the message, screenshot it, send it to your attorney. Do not reply.

“What if we have kids together and need to coordinate?” You cannot contact them directly. Your attorney must file a motion to modify the order for child-related communication. Until then, communication must go through your attorney or a third party approved by the court.

“What if I see them at the grocery store?” Leave immediately. Do not approach. Do not speak. If they approach you, politely say “I can’t talk to you, there’s a court order” and leave.

“What if it’s an emergency involving our child?” Call 911 or your attorney. Do not contact them directly, even in emergencies.

What About Social Media Specifically?

This trips people up constantly. Here’s the rule:

DO NOT:

  • View their profile (if the app shows who viewed)
  • Like, react or comment on anything they post
  • Share or retweet their posts
  • Tag them in photos
  • Send any messages
  • Post anything clearly directed at them

Why this matters: Prosecutors and judges regularly review social media in domestic violence cases. One “like” on their photo = violation = re-arrest.

What Happens If You Violate the Order

Violating a no-contact order or protective order is a new crime in Texas under Penal Code ยง 25.07, separate from your original charge.

The Immediate Consequences

You get arrested again: If the alleged victim reports the violation to police, you will be arrested. This can happen even if the violation was “minor” like a single text.

New criminal charge:

  • Violation of Protective Order = Class A misdemeanor (up to 1 year in jail, $4,000 fine)
  • If you have prior violations or committed assault during the contact = felony charge possible

Your bond gets revoked: The judge in your original case will revoke your bond. You’ll sit in Harris County jail until your case is resolved โ€” which could be many months.

Higher bond (if you get out): If the judge grants bond again, it will be much higher and have even stricter conditions.

New court dates, new attorney fees: You’re now defending TWO cases instead of one.

How It Destroys Your Original Case

Beyond the immediate arrest, a violation makes your original domestic violence case much harder to win:

You look guilty: Prosecutors and judges see violation as evidence you’re dangerous, can’t follow rules, and are trying to intimidate the victim.

Weakens negotiating position: Your attorney can’t effectively negotiate for dismissal or reduced charges when you’ve shown you don’t respect court orders.

Victim appears more credible: If they claim they’re afraid of you, your violation supports their story.

Prosecution has more leverage: They can threaten to prosecute both cases unless you accept a worse plea deal on the original charge.

Real Example Scenario

Day 1: You’re released on $5,000 bond with no-contact order.

Day 3: You text the alleged victim: “I’m sorry. Can we talk?”

Day 4: They show the text to police. Warrant issued for your arrest.

Day 5: You’re arrested at work. Bond revoked. You’re in jail.

Week 2: New bond hearing. Judge sets new bond at $15,000 for the violation charge. Your original bond is still revoked.

Month 2: You’re still in jail because you can’t afford the higher bond. Your original case goes to trial while you’re in custody. You lose.

This happens all the time. Don’t let it happen to you.

Can You Get the Order Changed or Removed?

Yes, it’s possible to ask a judge to modify or remove a no-contact order. But it’s not easy, not guaranteed, and the alleged victim cannot do it on their own.

Who Can Change It

Only the judge can modify or lift a no-contact order.

The alleged victim cannot drop it, even if they want to. Even if they go to the courthouse and say “I don’t want this order anymore,” it stays in place unless the judge agrees to remove it.

How to Request Modification

Your attorney must file a formal Motion to Modify Conditions of Bond with the Harris County court.

What the motion must include:

  • Compelling reason for the change
  • Evidence supporting the request
  • Often an affidavit from the alleged victim

Common reasons judges consider:

Need to communicate about children:

  • Coordinating custody/visitation
  • Discussing medical or school issues
  • Emergency situations involving kids

Logistical issues during separation:

  • Dividing property
  • Coordinating moving out
  • Financial matters (joint accounts, bills)

Alleged victim wants contact:

  • Sworn affidavit stating they’re not afraid
  • Statement they want to reconcile or maintain relationship
  • Confirmation they initiated the request (not coerced)

The Hearing Process

What happens:

  • Judge schedules a hearing
  • Prosecutor can object (they often do)
  • Your attorney argues why modification is appropriate
  • Alleged victim may testify
  • Judge decides

What judges consider:

  • Safety of the alleged victim
  • Seriousness of the original charges
  • Whether you’ve complied with all other bond conditions
  • Alleged victim’s wishes (important but not controlling)
  • Prosecutor’s recommendation

Timeline: Usually 2-4 weeks from filing to hearing.

Possible Outcomes

Full removal: Order is completely lifted. (Rare unless case is very weak or victim strongly advocates for it)

Partial modification: Order is modified to allow limited contact:

  • “Text or email about children only”
  • “Contact only through approved third party”
  • “Contact permitted but cannot go to victim’s home”

Denied: Order stays exactly as is.

Important: Even if modified, you must follow the NEW terms exactly. “Text about kids only” does not mean “text about anything you want.”

When Modification Is Most Likely

Strong cases for modification:

  • Alleged victim wants it removed and testifies credibly
  • You need to co-parent and have no other communication method
  • Original charges were minor and prosecutor doesn’t object
  • You’ve been 100% compliant with all other conditions

Weak cases for modification:

  • Serious violence alleged
  • Injuries documented
  • Pattern of violence
  • Prior protective order violations
  • Alleged victim is afraid

Why You Need an Experienced Houston Defense Attorney Now

A no-contact order puts you in a precarious legal position. One mistake can put you in jail. You need an attorney for two critical reasons:

1. Protecting You From Violations

Giving you crystal-clear rules: Many people violate orders because they don’t understand what “no contact” actually means. Your attorney ensures you know exactly what’s prohibited.

Handling communication when necessary: If you legitimately need to communicate about children, property or emergencies, your attorney can:

  • Serve as intermediary
  • File motion for modification
  • Advise on legally compliant alternatives

Monitoring compliance: Your attorney can review your planned actions to ensure they don’t violate the order before you do something that gets you arrested.

2. Resolving Your Underlying Case

The no-contact order exists because of the underlying criminal charge. The best way to get rid of the order permanently is to resolve that case.

Former prosecutor advantage: Lisa Strauss began her career as a prosecutor handling domestic violence cases. She understands:

  • How prosecutors view no-contact violations (very seriously)
  • What judges look for in modification hearings
  • How to build a defense that leads to dismissal or favorable resolution
  • The strategies needed to win these cases

When she resolves your case favorably:

  • Charges dismissed = order automatically dissolved
  • Favorable plea = order ends when case concludes
  • Acquittal at trial = order lifted immediately

The order is temporary. Your criminal case outcome determines how long you live under these restrictions.

Your Questions Answered

DO NOT RESPOND.

This is the #1 way people violate orders. They think: “They texted me first, so it’s okay to reply.”

Wrong.

The order applies to YOU, not them. They can contact you without violating anything. If you respond, YOU violated.

Why they might contact you:

  • They genuinely want to talk (but the legal order still applies)
  • They’re trying to get you to violate so you get arrested
  • Prosecutors told them to test whether you’ll violate

What to do:

  1. Do NOT reply
  2. Screenshot the message immediately
  3. Save it and send to your attorney
  4. Do not delete it (it’s evidence for your defense)

Your attorney can use their messages as evidence that:

  • They’re not actually afraid of you
  • They want the order removed
  • The order should be modified

No.

The alleged victim has no legal authority to change a court order. Only a judge can modify or lift it.

What they CAN do:

  • Sign an affidavit saying they want it removed
  • Testify at a hearing that they’re not afraid
  • Request that the judge modify it

What they CANNOT do:

  • Remove it themselves
  • Give you “permission” to violate it
  • Promise you won’t get in trouble if you contact them

Even if they say “it’s fine, I told the judge I want to talk to you,” do not contact them unless your attorney confirms the judge has officially modified the order.

It depends on which type you have:

Bond condition: Lasts until your criminal case is completely resolved

  • Dismissed: Order ends immediately
  • Plea deal: Ends when case is concluded
  • Trial verdict: Ends after sentencing
  • Average duration: 6 months to 2+ years depending on case complexity

Emergency Protective Order (MOEP):

  • Typically 31-61 days
  • Can be extended to 91 days in certain circumstances
  • Expires automatically unless converted to full protective order

Protective Order (civil):

  • Standard duration: Up to 2 years
  • Can be longer for cases involving serious bodily injury, sexual assault, stalking or trafficking
  • Can be lifetime in extreme cases
  • Expires automatically unless renewed

If you have multiple orders: You must follow whichever is longest/most restrictive until all expire or are lifted.

You cannot contact them directly about the kids. The no-contact order doesn’t have an exception for “child-related issues.”

Options:

Through your attorney: Your attorney can communicate with them or their attorney about custody arrangements.

Court-approved third party: Your attorney can file a motion requesting permission to use a specific person (family member, friend) as intermediary for child-related communication only.

Parenting apps: Some judges allow use of apps like OurFamilyWizard or TalkingParents that create a documented record of all communication about children.

Temporary custody order: Your family law attorney (or criminal attorney working with family court) can get a temporary custody order that specifies:

  • When exchanges happen
  • Where they happen
  • Whether communication is allowed and how

File motion to modify: Request the order be modified to allow “text or email communication regarding children only.”Emergency involving child: Call 911 or your attorney. Do not call the other parent directly, even in genuine emergencies.

Leave immediately.

If you’re at a store, park or public place and see them:

  1. Do not approach
  2. Do not speak
  3. Leave the area right away
  4. If they approach you, politely say “I can’t talk to you, there’s a court order” and leave

If they approach and won’t leave you alone:

  • Do not engage
  • Call your attorney or 911 if they follow you
  • Document what happened (where, when, witnesses)
  • Report to your attorney immediately

Cannot avoid each other (small town, same workplace, etc.): Your attorney should file a motion addressing this situation and requesting specific guidance from the judge on how to handle unavoidable proximity.

Generally yes, unless specifically prohibited.

Most no-contact orders prohibit going to the victim’s:

  • Home
  • Workplace
  • School

They don’t usually prohibit you from:

  • Your own regular places (your gym, your grocery store)
  • Public places you both might go

BUT:

  • If you know they’ll be there, don’t go.
  • Don’t show up at places to “coincidentally” see them.
  • Don’t go to their regular spots hoping to run into them.
  • If the order says “stay 200 yards away,” that applies everywhere.

Bottom line: Use common sense. If there’s any chance your presence could be interpreted as trying to contact them or intimidate them, don’t go.

READ MORE FAMILY VIOLENCE CHARGE FAQS

Get Help Now โ€” Don’t Risk Violating

A no-contact order is serious. One violation can destroy your case and put you back in jail for months.

You need an attorney who can:

  • Give you crystal-clear rules on what you can and cannot do
  • Handle necessary communication through legal channels
  • File motions to modify the order when appropriate
  • Fight your underlying case to get the order lifted permanently

Lisa Strauss has former prosecutor experience and knows exactly how Harris County handles these cases. She can protect you from violations while building a strong defense.

Don’t wait until you’ve already violated. Get help now.

Schedule Your Confidential Consultation

Call our Houston office today. We’ll explain your exact restrictions and start fighting your case.

Understand the rules. Protect your freedom. Contact us now.

Filed Under: Assault Family Member, Domestic Violence Tagged With: Bond conditions, Contact restrictions, Domestic Violence, Emergency protective order, Harris County bond, Houston DV lawyer, Modify protective order, No-contact order, Order violation, Protective order

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