What continuing professional development (CPD) do you need? This page summarises the CPD or revalidation framework that typically applies to a Probation Officer, with bullet points from official regulator and employer guidance and links to read the full rules. Where regulators publish hour targets, you can track your progress locally in your browser.

Sources and limitations
  • Summaries are based on published regulator, professional body and employer guidance linked on this page. Rules change; always confirm with the official source.
  • Role mapping is indicative: some staff may fall under a different regulator, dual registration, or local employer rules.
  • The hours tracker is for your own planning only; it does not replace your regulator’s or employer’s recording or appraisal systems.
  • This is not legal, regulatory or fitness-to-practise advice.

CPD & Professional Development Calculator

You'll see:

  • Which regulator or CPD framework typically applies to your role
  • Key requirements with links to official sources
  • Where applicable, a simple hours tracker against published targets

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Frequently asked questions

About this role

What is a Probation Officer?

A Probation Officer works with people on community sentences or released from prison. They assess risk, supervise offenders and support rehabilitation. Most hold a degree or professional qualification and work for the National Probation Service (NPS) or a CRC.

Is it a rewarding career?

Probation work offers impact on rehabilitation and public protection. Pay and job satisfaction depend on employer and grade. Progression to senior probation officer or management is common.

What CPD or revalidation applies to me?

Use the guidance and official links above to see what your regulator or employer expects for continuing professional development. Keep records and reflection as they require; confirm any hour targets on the regulator’s current website.

Disclaimer

This page summarises publicly described CPD and revalidation requirements for awareness only. It is not legal, regulatory or fitness-to-practise advice. Rules change; always confirm with your regulator, professional body and employer.