What RMS is
RMS stands for Recovery Monitoring Solutions. It is a private company that handles drug testing, alcohol monitoring, and related services for courts and probation departments in Texas. Montgomery County Adult Probation lists RMS as a testing provider on its offender resources page.
RMS is not the probation department. Your probation officer still makes the decisions. RMS just runs the testing.
How the daily check works
If you are on random urinalysis (UA) testing through RMS, you have to find out each day whether it is your day to test. The Montgomery County Adult Probation handout gives one number for that:
RMS daily testing line: (936) 283-4848
This number comes from the county's own handout. Numbers can change, so always trust the paperwork your officer gave you over anything you read online, including this page.
You call the line, and it tells you whether you have to test that day. If it is your day, you go give a sample before the office closes. If it is not your day, you call again tomorrow. The safest habit is to call early in the day, every day, so you have time to get to the office if you are called.
Where you test
The main RMS testing office for Montgomery County is in Conroe:
RMS Conroe office: 310 East Davis, Suite 100, Conroe, TX 77301
Office phone: (936) 207-4223
The Conroe office is open on weekdays and sometimes on Saturday mornings when required. RMS also has an office in New Caney on US Highway 59, but you can only test there if your officer assigned you to that location. Check with your officer first.
Two things to know before you go:
- Get there early. You must be checked in at least 15 minutes before the office closes, or you will not be tested that day.
- Bring payment. You pay for the test yourself, by cash or credit card. If you pay cash, bring exact change. The amount is set by the provider and can change, so confirm before you go.
What happens if you miss
Missing the daily check-in, or getting called and not showing up, is a serious problem. In most probation testing programs, a missed test is treated like a failed test, and it can be reported to your officer as a violation. What happens after that is up to your officer and the court.
If you miss a day, do not wait. Call your probation officer, tell them what happened, and follow their instructions. Speaking up first is always better than them finding out from a report.
The hard part is every single day
One call is easy. The hard part is making that call every day, for months or years, without ever letting it slip. Work shifts, sick kids, dead batteries: life gets in the way, and the line does not care why you missed.
CallForMe was built for exactly this. We call your check-in line for you every day. Then we tell you what it said by text, email, and phone call. If it is your day to test, you know early enough to plan your trip to the office.
Common questions
What number do I call for RMS daily testing in Montgomery County?
The county handout lists (936) 283-4848 as the daily testing line. Confirm it against your own paperwork.
Where do I go to test?
The main office is at 310 East Davis, Suite 100 in Conroe. The New Caney office on US Highway 59 is only for people assigned to it by their officer.
Do I have to pay for the test?
Yes. You pay by cash or credit card, and cash needs exact change. The amount can change, so confirm before you go.
What if I miss my check-in or my test?
Contact your probation officer right away. A missed check-in or test is usually treated like a failed test, and your officer decides what happens next.
Tired of carrying the daily call on your own? CallForMe calls the line for you and tells you what it said by text, email, and phone call. See how it works.
CallForMe is a private service. We are not affiliated with any court, probation department, parole board, drug court, or drug-testing provider, including Recovery Monitoring Solutions or Montgomery County Adult Probation. Nothing on this page is legal advice. Phone numbers, addresses, hours, and fees can change. Always follow the paperwork from your court and the instructions from your officer.