A misdemeanor is a lower-level criminal offense that usually carries lighter penalties and fewer severe collateral consequences than a felony.
Misdemeanor is a lower-level category of crime that usually carries lighter penalties and less severe long-term consequences than a felony.
The misdemeanor label affects expectations about punishment, court process, plea negotiations, and the practical seriousness of the case. Even so, a misdemeanor is still a criminal matter and can produce fines, jail exposure, probation, and a record.
This term also matters because people often downplay it. Calling something “only a misdemeanor” can hide the fact that the charge still carries legal and personal consequences.
Misdemeanor language appears in charging papers, arraignment calendars, plea discussions, sentencing statutes, and background-check conversations. Courts, statutes, and news coverage often use the term as shorthand for the seriousness level of the charge.
A person is charged with a low-level disorderly conduct offense classified by statute as a misdemeanor. The charge is still criminal, but it is treated as less serious than a felony assault charge.
A misdemeanor is generally less serious than a felony. The term classifies the offense; it does not describe whether the prosecution has met its burden of proof. A misdemeanor case may still involve arraignment, bail, and plea negotiation.