Booking process, San Diego County bail schedule, and how to get release fast
If someone you know has just been arrested in Encinitas, you're facing a situation that's equal parts confusing, stressful, and time-sensitive. Understanding how bail bonds Encinitas work — and what happens at the SDSD North Coastal Sheriff Station — puts you in a position to act quickly and get your loved one home as fast as possible.
This guide covers the complete picture: where people are taken after an Encinitas arrest, how the booking process works at the San Diego County Sheriff's facility, what the San Diego bail schedule looks like for common charges, and exactly how a licensed bail bondsman speeds up the release process.
Don't have time to read? Call us now: (626) 478-1062). A licensed agent answers 24/7 — we locate your loved one, confirm their bail amount, and start the bond immediately.
The City of Encinitas contracts law enforcement services to the San Diego County Sheriff's Department (SDSD). When someone is arrested in Encinitas, they are transported to the SDSD North Coastal Sheriff Station, located at 175 N El Camino Real, Encinitas, CA 92024 (phone: 760-966-3500). This station also serves Solana Beach, Del Mar, and unincorporated areas of Rancho Santa Fe.
The North Coastal station is a local holding facility — it handles initial bookings, short-term detention, and in-custody court appearances for North County arrests. Depending on the severity of the charges, defendants may be held here through arraignment or transferred to a larger San Diego County detention facility such as the Vista Detention Facility in Vista or the George Bailey Detention Facility in Otay Mesa.
To find out whether someone is in custody at any San Diego County facility, the Sheriff's Department provides an online inmate locator at sdsheriff.gov. Records typically appear 2 to 4 hours after booking is processed. If you can't find a record immediately, that does not mean the person hasn't been arrested — it simply means the booking entry is still being processed.
Booking is a multi-step administrative process that must be completed before bail can be set and posted. Here is what happens at the SDSD North Coastal Station after an arrest:
For most misdemeanor arrests in Encinitas, this full process takes 2 to 6 hours. Felony arrests — or arrests with complications such as prior warrants or medical holds — can take significantly longer. Arrests on Friday evenings or over weekends involve reduced court staffing, which can delay arraignment if bail is not posted quickly.
The Superior Court of California, County of San Diego publishes an annual bail schedule that sets the standard bail amount for each charge. These are the amounts a defendant or their bail bondsman must satisfy to secure release before the arraignment hearing. A judge can adjust these amounts at arraignment based on flight risk, criminal history, and ties to the community.
Here are representative amounts from the San Diego County bail schedule for common charges:
| Charge | Penal Code | Bail Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Assault with deadly weapon (not firearm) | PC 245(a)(1) | $25,000 |
| Burglary (second degree — commercial) | PC 459 | $20,000 |
| Burglary (first degree — residential) | PC 459 | $50,000 |
| DUI causing injury | VC 23153 | $100,000 |
| Robbery | PC 211 | $100,000 |
| Possession for sale (controlled substance) | HS 11351 | $20,000 |
| Grand theft (over $950) | PC 487 | $20,000 |
Remember: these amounts are set at booking. At arraignment — which must occur within 48 hours of arrest under California Penal Code § 825 (excluding Sundays and court holidays) — the judge may increase or reduce bail based on the specifics of the case. Posting bail before arraignment preserves the schedule amount. Waiting for arraignment on a serious felony charge carries the risk of a higher bail being set.
When bail is set at $25,000 or $50,000 or more, most families do not have that amount liquid and available — especially at midnight on a Saturday. A bail bond solves that problem.
Under California Insurance Code § 1800.4, the standard bail bond premium is 10% of the total bail amount. For a $25,000 bail, you pay $2,500 to the bail bondsman — not $25,000 in cash to the court. The bondsman then posts the full amount as a surety bond, guaranteeing the defendant's appearance in court. The 10% premium is the cost of this service and is non-refundable once the bond is posted.
Here is what we do at Angels Bail Bonds that you cannot do on your own:
To get started, we need as much of the following as you have available. You do not need all of it:
If all you know is a name and that they were arrested in Encinitas — call anyway. We start searching immediately.
Angels Bail Bonds has served Southern California since 1958, making us one of the longest-operating bail bond agencies in the state. We hold California Insurance License #1K06080 — fully licensed and regulated by the California Department of Insurance.
We serve Encinitas and all of San Diego County's North Coastal region, including Carlsbad, Solana Beach, Del Mar, Oceanside, San Marcos, and Cardiff-by-the-Sea. Whether your loved one is being held at the North Coastal Station or has been transferred to the Vista Detention Facility, we know how to reach them and how to move fast.
Our agents speak English and Spanish (Hablamos Español), and we answer every call — no voicemail, no automated systems, no "call back during business hours." When someone is in custody, every hour matters.
A licensed agent is standing by right now. We locate, confirm bail, and start the bond process in under 30 minutes.
(626) 478-1062People arrested in Encinitas are taken to the SDSD North Coastal Sheriff Station at 175 N El Camino Real, Encinitas, CA 92024. For more serious felony charges, they may later be transferred to a larger San Diego County facility such as Vista Detention Facility (325 S Melrose Dr, Vista) or the George Bailey Detention Facility in Otay Mesa.
Misdemeanor bookings typically take 2 to 6 hours from arrest to bail eligibility. Felony bookings, or those involving outstanding warrants or medical needs, can take longer. Evening and weekend arrests often run toward the longer end of the range.
The standard California premium is 10% of the bail amount under Insurance Code § 1800.4. For a $20,000 bail, that's $2,000. For a $50,000 bail, that's $5,000. We offer payment plans for families who need them.
Yes. SDSD facilities accept bail bonds 24 hours a day, every day of the year — including holidays. Angels Bail Bonds has licensed agents on call around the clock to post bonds at North Coastal and every other San Diego County jail.
No. Under California law, the 10% premium is a non-refundable service fee — it is what the bondsman charges for posting the bond on your behalf. It is not a deposit. Even if charges are dropped, the premium is earned when the bond is posted.
This article is for general informational purposes only. Bail amounts and processing timelines are subject to change. For advice specific to your situation, contact a licensed bail bond agent at (626) 478-1062. Angels Bail Bonds holds California Insurance License #1K06080.