*847 OPINION
Thе United States District Court for the District of Nevada certified the following question for this court’s determination: “Is a conviction of sexual assault infirm when it is based on a guilty plea in which the defendant was advised of the mandatory minimum sentence but was not advised that the crime was nonproba-tional?” We conclude that a defendant must be aware that his offense is nonprobational prior to entering his guilty plea because it is a direct consequence arising from the plea. However, in so concluding, we emphasize that in considering whether a particular defendant was aware that he was ineligible for probation, we need not and do not focus on “talismanic phrases.” Rather, we *848 review the entire record and consider the totality of the facts and circumstances surrounding the plea in order to ensure that a defendant was aware that his offense was nonprobational.
FACTS
The relevant legal and procedural circumstances of this case are not in dispute. In November 1990, petitioner Christopher Little pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual assault on a minor under fourteen years of age. 1 Specifically, Little pleaded guilty to count I, inserting his penis inside the vagina of his nine-year-old daughter, and to count IV, forcing his eleven-year-old son to insert his son’s penis inside his nine-year-old daughter’s vagina. In exсhange for his guilty plea, the State moved to dismiss four other counts against Little.
After a lengthy plea canvass, the district court sentenced Little to serve two consecutive terms of life in prison with the possibility of parole after ten years. Little did not file a direct appeal. However, Little subsequently filed a post-convictiоn petition for a writ of habeas corpus in 1991 and a second post-conviction petition in 1995. The district court denied the petitions. This court affirmed the orders of the district court. 2 Thereafter, Little filed a proper person petition for an extraordinary writ challenging the validity of his guilty plea, which this court denied. 3
On July 8, 1998, Little filed a post-conviction petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court. In the petition, he argued that his right to equal protection had been violated because this court treated him differently than other persons convicted of sexual assault by failing to apply its existing case law to him. Specifically, Little contеnded that this court disregarded its holdings in Meyer v. State 4 and Aswegan v. State. 5 These decisions hold that a district court commits manifest error when it accepts a guilty plea to a nonprobational offense without advising the defendant on the record that the defendant is ineligible for probation.
*849 DISCUSSION
We begin, as we have before, by reaffirming the solemn nature of the oral рlea canvass. 6 When the district court accepts a defendant’s guilty plea, it must act with “utmost solicitude” to ensure that a defendant has a full understanding of both the nature of the charges and the direct consequences arising from a plea of guilty. 7 A consequence is deemed “direct” if it has “a definite, immediate and largely automatic effect on the range of the defendant’s рunishment.” 8
With the glaring exception of the penalty of death, there is perhaps no consequence more direct and immediate on the defendant’s range of punishment than ineligibility for probation. 9 After all, ineligibility for probation means incarceration; it means that there is not even a remote possibility that the district court will еxercise its discretion and suspend the execution of sentence. The loss of the possibility of probation therefore becomes “an inseparable ingredient of the punishment imposed. Its effect is so powerful that it translates the term imposed by the sentencing judge into a mandate of actual imprisonment.” 10
Becausе we conclude that ineligibility for probation is a direct consequence arising from a guilty plea, 11 we reaffirm our prior *850 case law to the extent that it holds that a defendant must be aware that an offense is nonprobational prior to entry of his plea. 12 However, we overrule our prior case law to the extent that it holds that the district court’s lack of advisement on the record about nonprobationality is per se manifest error.
In Meyer v. State, over two decades ago, this court held that a district court’s failure to advise that probation was not available created a “fatal defect” and “manifest injustice” that could only be corrected by setting aside the cоnviction. 13 Over the years and without further analysis, this court reaffirmed the holding in Meyer. In Heimrich, although we declined to apply Meyer retroactively, we noted that if Meyer had applied, it would warrant reversal because the district court accepted a defendant’s guilty plea without advising him of the nonprobational nature of his offense. 14 Similarly, in Aswegan, we concluded that a guilty plea was not voluntary and intelligent because of “[t]he mаnifest injustice created by the district court’s failure to inform [the defendant] that probation was not a possibility in his case.” 15
In Riker v. State, 16 however, we implicitly modified the principle espoused in Meyer and its progeny and applied the totality of the circumstances analysis that we adopted in Bryant v. State. 17 In fact, in Riker, we held that the district court’s failure to advise a defendant about the nonprobational nature of an offense was not manifest error, a fatal defect, or otherwise reversible. 18 In so holding, we reasoned that where the record reveals that a defendant knew that he was ineligible for probation, the mere fact that he was not explicitly advised of that fact by the district court did not vitiate his otherwise valid plea. 19
We reiterated this proposition a few years later in Skinner v. State. 20 In Skinner, we held that, in considering whether the defen *851 dant was advised that probation was unavailable, the court is not limited to the record of the plea canvass; rather, an advisement is sufficient if it appears in the guilty plea memorandum, in a pretrial hearing transcript, or elsewhere in the record. 21
To the extent that Meyer, Heimrich, and Aswegan support a contrary proposition — that the district court’s lack of advisement on the record about nonprobationality is “manifest error,” a “fatal defect,” or otherwise reversible as a matter of law — they are hereby overruled. We modify Meyer and its progeny in this regard — the district court’s failure to advise a defendant that he is ineligible for probation is error, but it is not always reversible error. Where it appears, in examining the totality of the circumstances, that a defendant knew thаt probation was not available at the time of the entry of the guilty plea, we will not vitiate an otherwise valid guilty plea. 22
Our holding is grounded in our longstanding belief that, in determining whether a defendant entered a guilty plea knowingly and voluntarily, a reviewing court should carefully consider the totality of the circumstance's. 23 “[WJhile we believe trial courts should in all circumstances conduct sufficient and thorough plea canvasses, ... we cannot be constrained to look only to the technical sufficiency of a plea canvass to determine whether a plea’ ’ is invalid. 24 Rather, our inquiry focuses on whether a particular defendant actually understood the direсt consequences of his guilty plea. 25 This approach does not intrude on the defendant’s due process rights because the circumstances surrounding the guilty plea are reviewed to ensure that the defendant knew the direct consequences arising therefrom.
Because the totality of the circumstances inquiry is essentially factual in nature, the issue of whether a defendant was aware that probation was not available when the defendant entered the plea *852 should be reviewed in the first instance in the district court. 26 We will not review this factual matter on direct appeal from the judgment of conviction unless the claim was raised and decided in thе context of a pre-judgment motion to withdraw a plea. Otherwise, a defendant must raise a claim in the district court that a guilty plea was infirm because the defendant was not aware that probation was unavailable, either by bringing a post-conviction motion to withdraw the guilty plea or by initiating a post-conviction habeas proceeding. 27 The district court may reject this claim of constitutional infirmity without conducting an evidentiary hearing in two instances.
In the first instance, the district court may decline to conduct an evidentiary hearing if it finds that the defendant’s claim is belied by the record. 28 In determining whether a defendant’s claim is belied by the record, several considеrations are relevant, although our discussion is not exhaustive. First, a defendant may have been advised in the plea memorandum that the offense was nonprobational. 29 Second, a defendant or his counsel may have made statements on the record at the arraignment, sentencing hearing, or other proceeding that demonstrate that the defendant pleaded guilty knowing that he would be serving actual prison time. 30 Third, the defendant’s awareness of the unavailability of probation or the certainty of an actual prison term may be evident from the plea negotiations. For example, the district court may find that a claim that the defendant did not know thе offense was nonprobational is belied by the fact that the defendant agreed to plea negotiations requiring a prison term for a definite, specific period of years, or the defendant requested a definite prison term at allocution. 31 Accordingly, where the record undoubtedly reveals that a defendant knew thе guilty plea would result in an actual, nonprobational term of imprisonment, an evidentiary hearing is not warranted.
*853 In the second instance, the district court may decline to conduct an evidentiary hearing where a claim that the defendant did not know that probation was unavailable is untimely or successive. In considering an untimely clаim, the relevant analysis applied by the district court will differ according to the manner in which a defendant raises the claim.
For example, where a defendant raises his claim in a post-judgment motion to withdraw a guilty plea, the equitable doctrine of laches may preclude consideration of the motion on the merits. 32 We recently explained the doctrine of laches in Hart:
Application of the doctrine to an individual case may require consideration of several factors, including: (1) whether there was an inexcusable delay in seeking relief; (2) whether an implied waiver has arisen from the defendant’s knowing acquiescence in existing conditions; and (3) whether circumstances exist that prejudice the State. Additionally, where a defendant previously has sought relief from the judgment, the defendant’s failure to identify all grounds for relief in the first instance should weigh against consideration of the successive motion. 33
Where a defendant raises a claim in an untimely or successive post-conviction petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the defendant has the burden of demonstrating good cause and actual prejudice to overcome the procedural default. 34 Also, if a petition is: (1) filed over five years after the remittitur disposing of the direct appeal or the judgment of conviction where no direct appeal was filed; and (2) the State pleads laches, the defendant will have the heavy burden of proving a fundamental miscarriage of justice to overcome the presumption of prejudice to the State. 35
Our application of procedural and doctrinal time bars is based upon our enduring belief in the finality of judgments. As explained by the United States Supreme Court:
Every inrоad on the concept of finality undermines confidence in the integrity of our procedures; and, by increasing the volume of judicial work, inevitably delays and impairs the *854 orderly administration of justice. . . . Moreover, the concern that unfair procedures may have resulted in the conviction of an innocent defendant is only rarеly raised by a petition to set aside a guilty plea. 36
We cannot allow a dilatory defendant to impair the orderly administration of justice without a sufficient justification for the delay to overcome the prejudice to the State that almost inevitably results from the passage of time.
In instances where a defendant’s claim is neither belied by the record nor procedurally or doctrinally barred, the district court should conduct an evidentiary hearing. At the hearing, the district court may hear testimony from the defendant, counsel, or any other individual with knowledge of whether the defendant knew, at entry of the plea, that the defendant was ineligible for probation. Thе district court’s factual finding, adjudging the credibility of the witnesses and the evidence, is entitled to deference on appeal and will not be overturned by this court if supported by substantial evidence. 37
We emphasize, however, that a defendant’s actual awareness of the ineligibility for probation must appear affirmatively in the record. It would be inappropriate for the district court to infer or impute knowledge to a particular defendant based upon a conclusion or an inference that a defendant should have known that probation was unavailable. After all, in pleading guilty, a defendant is foregoing a panoply of rights and providing the State with a guarantee of a conviction without the uncertainty and costs associated with a jury trial. Because of the gravity of a defendant’s decision to plead guilty, due process demands that the face of the record reveal that a defendant knew at the time of the entry of the guilty plea that probation was nоt an option or that the defendant would be serving actual time in prison. 38
In light of the aforementioned analysis, we answer the federal court’s question as follows: the district court’s failure to advise a defendant that he was ineligible for probation does not warrant reversal where the totality of the circumstances demonstratе that the defendant was aware, at the time he pleaded guilty, that he *855 would be serving an actual prison term because he was ineligible for probation. 39
Notes
At the time of Little’s offense, NRS 176.185(1) provided that persons convicted of sexual assault were ineligible for probation. See 1989 Nev. Stat., ch. 790, § 11, at 1887. The current provision precluding probаtion for persons convicted of sexual assault is NRS 176A.100(l)(a).
Little v. State, Docket No. 22996 (Order Dismissing Appeal, March 25, 1992); Little v. State, Docket No. 25330 (Order Dismissing Appeal, December 18, 1996).
Little v. State, Docket No. 32002 (Order Denying Petition, May 22, 1998).
See State v. Freese,
Boykin
v.
Alabama,
Torrey
v.
Estelle,
See Berry
v.
United States,
Berry,
We recognize that there is some disagreement with our conclusion.
See Tabora v. State,
See Aswegan
v.
State,
Id.
at 1322-23 ,
Id.
at 1323,
See State
v.
Nero,
See Bryant,
Bryant,
Id.
at 276,
See id.
at 272,
Id.
at 272,
See Hargrove
v.
State,
Freese,
See, e.g., Nero,
See Nero,
Hart,
Id.
at 564,
See NRS 34.726; NRS 34.810.
See
NRS 34.800;
see also Nero,
We have considered all proper person documents filed or received in this matter, and we conclude that the relief requested is not warranted. We have also considered Little’s motion requesting oral argument, filed November 13, 2000, and conclude that oral argument is not necessary for our resolution of this case.
United States v. Timmreck,
See Riley v. State,
Boykin
v.
Alabama,
