Janet Bergstrom — former King County Deputy Prosecutor. Free consultation 24/7 at (206) 555-0194.
Washington State calls it 'vacating' a conviction rather than expungement, but the result is the same: your record is cleared for most purposes. If you've completed your sentence and waiting period, you may be eligible to have your record vacated — removing the barrier to jobs, housing, and professional licenses.
Under RCW 9.94A.640 and RCW 9.96.060, certain criminal convictions can be vacated after a waiting period. Once vacated, you can legally say you were not convicted of that crime on most job applications, housing applications, and professional licensing forms.
Most gross misdemeanors and misdemeanors are eligible after: 3 years with no additional convictions, all conditions of sentencing satisfied, no pending charges, and the conviction is not on the excluded list (DUI, domestic violence assault are excluded).
Class B and C felonies may be eligible after 5–10 years depending on the offense. Class A felonies are generally not eligible. Sex offenses and crimes against children are excluded.
Vacating a conviction does not: eliminate the record from court files entirely, restore firearm rights (a separate process), or expunge the record from private background check databases immediately. However, it does allow you to legally deny the conviction in most contexts.
Janet files a petition with the court, serves the prosecutor, and attends the hearing on your behalf. Most straightforward cases are resolved within 90–120 days. Complex cases or cases where the prosecutor objects take longer.
Every day without an attorney matters. Free consultation — no obligation.