Brown, J.
Shawn A. Haslam appeals the trial court’s denial of his Motion to Clarify Sentencing Order for Probation. We affirm.
…
The court’s sentencing order as amended states: On Count II, [Haslam] sentenced to the Indiana Department of Corrections for a period of 2 years, suspended except for time served. [Haslam] shall receive jail time credit from 6/6/2021 to 6/6/2021 and 6/21/2021 to 7/14/2021. On the HVSO, [Haslam] sentenced to the Indiana Department of Corrections for a period of 5 years, suspended. [Haslam] shall serve five years (two and one-half years actual) on electronically-monitored home detention with West Central Regional Community Corrections as a term of probation; [Haslam] shall be hooked up within 14 days. Count II and the HVSO shall run consecutive to each other. [Haslam] placed on supervised probation for a period of 7 years. Count I is dismissed.
…
Haslam asserts, “[f]actoring in the statutorily mandated day-for-day credit for time spent on home detention, five of [his] ordered years on probation should only amount to two-and-a-half actual years” and “[t]he other two years of probation would not be subject to the home detention credit, making for a total of four-and-a-half actual years.” Appellant’s Brief at 8. The State maintains that “[t]he credit that [Haslam] is to receive for his time on home detention, however, only serves to shorten the time that he is to spend on home detention and not his agreed-upon seven-year term of probation.”
…
The court ordered that Haslam be placed on home detention as a term of probation. Ind. Code § 35-38-2.5-5 is titled “Home detention as a condition of probation.” Ind. Code § 35-38-2.5-5(a) provides that, as a condition of probation, a court may order an offender confined to the offender’s home for a period of home detention. Further, Ind. Code § 35-38-2.5-5 provides in part:
(d) A person’s term of confinement on home detention under this chapter is computed on the basis of accrued time on home detention plus any good time credit.
(e) A person confined on home detention as a condition of probation receives one (1) day of accrued time for each day the person is confined on home detention.
(f) In addition to accrued time under subsection (e), a person confined on home detention as a condition of probation is entitled to earn good time credit under IC 35-50-6-3 or IC 35-50-6-3.1.[2] . . .
Ind. Code § 35-38-2.5-5.
We note that Ind. Code § 35-38-2.5-5(d) expressly provides that a person’s “term of confinement on home detention” is computed on the basis of the person’s accrued time on home detention plus any good time credit, and it does not provide that the person’s term of probation is computed on the basis of accrued time on home detention plus any good time credit. Haslam does not point to a provision of Ind. Code § 35-38-2.5-5 which provides that the good time credit which a person earns while confined on home detention affects or reduces the length of the person’s ordered probation. Haslam’s plea agreement provided: “An enhanced sentence of seven (7) years shall be imposed, all suspended, probation for seven (7) years, home detention to be a term of probation for five (5) of those years, Defendant to receive good time credit for time spent on home detention.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 17. The court’s sentencing order, consistent with the plea agreement, states that Haslam “shall serve five years (two and one-half years actual)” on home detention and that Haslam be “placed on supervised probation for a period of 7 years.” Id. at 23. The trial court denied Haslam’s motion to clarify. We find no error.
Based on the foregoing, we affirm the trial court.
Affirmed.
Bradford, C.J., and Mathias, J., concur.