A visit is one of the most powerful experiences available to both an incarcerated person and their family. The physical presence of someone who loves you, even across a table or through glass, communicates something that letters and phone calls cannot fully replicate. But the visitation process involves rules, approvals, background checks, and scheduling requirements that can be confusing and discouraging for first-time visitors. This section covers how to apply to be on an inmate's visitor list, what the background check process looks like and what disqualifies a visitor, what to expect on your first visit including what to wear, what you can bring, and how the visit itself is conducted, how contact visits differ from non-contact visits, what children need to know before visiting an incarcerated parent, and how to make the most of limited visitation time. The guidance here is practical and comes from people who have been on both sides of the visitation table. See also our sections on Family Services, Relationship Issues, and Inmate Phone Calls.
Subject: Visitation
You might be subject to a thorough search (the fear is that you might smuggle something in your hair) but if it's natural and you do not have any ill intention you should not have a problem.
Subject: Visitation
You can visit as long as you are on the normal visitation list and there are no issues with your approval. Special visits are for people that travel a long distance and would like to request more visitation time due to the expense and limitations on the visitor. Most prison staff will approve a special visit if you are coming to the jail from 100 miles away or more.
Subject: Visitation
You will not have to put your newborn on the visitation list, but check with the staff before you go to be sure that you are not bringing something that they will not allow in the facility visitation. Most of the staff will have no problem with your husband holding the baby, just ask them nicely - it's always better to ask permission as it shows them respect.
Subject: Visitation
Depending on what comes back from your background check, it normally takes no more than a week for an answer. Be mindful that the inmate receives notice of your approval and must notify their approved visitors.
Subject: Visitation
As long as you do not have a record of serving time in that facility or an outstanding warrant and are on your inmate's visitation list, you should be able to see him on visiting day.
Subject: Visitation
Visitation denials can be appealed and the decision on whether to grant an exception rests with the warden's office at the facility. The honest assessment of the odds is roughly 50/50, which means the appeal is genuinely worth pursuing but there are no guarantees regardless of how strong your case appears on paper.
The strongest appeals are the ones that tell a complete and documented story rather than just arguing that the denial was unfair. In a situation where a felony...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
Being on probation does not automatically disqualify you from visiting someone held at an immigration detention facility but it does add a layer of complexity that requires careful handling before you show up at the door.
ICE detention facilities operated by private contractors like CoreCivic, formerly CCA, run their own visitor approval processes that are separate from the standard state or federal prison visitor screening. Central Arizona Detention Center follows ICE's civil detention standards for visitation rather than the criminal corrections...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
Yes, as long as you go through the approval process, non-relative friends may visit him.
Subject: Visitation
Being in single man lockup, which is typically administrative segregation or protective custody rather than general population, does affect visitation but it does not necessarily eliminate it entirely.
Visitation for inmates in segregated housing is more restricted than for general population inmates. Some facilities suspend visitation during the initial placement period while the situation is being assessed. Others allow non-contact visits through a partition on a limited schedule. The specific policy depends entirely on the facility and the reason for the...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
This is strictly up to the prison warden. If you have been an inmate in the GDC, you will need to explain the entire story to the warden or someone on their staff to get consideration for a visit. Normally, felons and ex-convicts are NOT allowed to visit at any institution. If you think your circumstances merit the visit, you will need to go through a vetting protocol before you get permission.


