Primary Mental Health Treatment Requirements (PMHTR) are one of three under the umbrella 'Community Sentence Treatment Requirements'. PMHTRs have been designed to reduce offenders' recidivism by offering psychological therapy to individuals with primary level mental health issues. In 2020, Midlands Partnership Foundation Trust (MPFT) began offering PMHTR services across Staffordshire. This study evaluates Staffordshire's service users' experience of their PMHTR through thematic analysis. Semi-structured interviews were completed with six participants who were contacted at random from all individuals who had finished their PMHTR. Themes such as consistency, learning skills and counselling emerged. Results demonstrate that participants' experiences of their PMHTR was reported positively, with the theme of a tailored package of therapeutic care appearing to play a key role in this. Participants reported their experience of engaging in the PMHTR in a more affirmative manner in comparison to similar interventions they had experienced across other mental health services. Conversely, due to the limited participant sample, this may limit the level of representation of this population, thus restricting the scope of generalisability. The limitations of this evaluation are discussed. To expand and enhance further, routinely requesting feedback from service users after completion of their PMHTR is advocated and thus repeating this evaluation again longitudinally. Nevertheless, PMHTRs are demonstrating the ability to fill a gap in service provision for offenders with mental health issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]