South Carolina · Updated July 2026 · Verified by InmateAid

SPOKE ARTICLE - State Inmate Locator series - SOUTH CAROLINA

Find an inmate in South Carolina fast. Search the state prison system, county jails, federal, and ICE custody, and what to do when someone is not listed.

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Links up to: /prisons/south-carolina (state hub)

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How to Find an Inmate in South Carolina

If someone you love was just arrested or sent to prison in South Carolina, the first thing you need is also the hardest to get: a straight answer about where they are. South Carolina does not have one single database that lists everyone in custody. The person you are looking for could be in a county jail, a state prison, a federal facility, or immigration detention, and each of those is searched a different way. This guide walks you through all four, in the order most families need them, and tells you what to do when someone does not show up at all.

One thing about South Carolina is worth knowing up front. The state does not have a long-term immigration detention center of its own. If your person was picked up by immigration agents, they are usually held only briefly in a county jail here before being moved to a facility in another state, and the section below on ICE custody explains how to handle that.

Start here: figure out which system is holding them

Before you search anything, answer one question, because it tells you which tool to use.

How long ago were they taken into custody, and what happened? Someone who was arrested in the last few days is almost always in the county jail, called a detention center in most of South Carolina, for the county where the arrest happened. They stay there through booking, the first court appearance, and often through their entire case if it is a local charge. People do not go to state prison when they are arrested. They go to state prison only after they have been sentenced and physically transferred into the custody of the South Carolina Department of Corrections, which can take weeks after sentencing while intake happens at a reception and evaluation center.

So the rule of thumb is simple. Recently arrested, case still pending, or a short sentence: look in the county detention center. Sentenced to state prison time and transferred: look in the South Carolina Department of Corrections. Federal charge: look in the federal system. Immigration hold: look in ICE custody. Most families searching for someone newly arrested waste time on the state prison site when their person is sitting in a county detention center across town.

Searching the South Carolina state prison system (SCDC)

The South Carolina Department of Corrections, or SCDC, holds everyone serving a state prison sentence. Its public Incarcerated Inmate Search lets you look a person up by name, by their SCDC number, or by their State Identification number, called a SID. The name search uses phonetic matching, which means it will return names that sound similar to what you typed, so it is forgiving of spelling. The results show the person's current facility, offense, status, and projected release date.

To search, you generally need the person's last name, and the SCDC or SID number helps narrow it when the name is common. One thing to know: the state search only covers people currently sentenced to and held in SCDC. It does not show people in county detention centers, people on parole or probation, juveniles, or anyone already released. So if your person is not there, it usually means they are in one of the other systems below, not that they cannot be found.

Searching county jails in South Carolina (recently arrested)

South Carolina has 46 counties, and each one runs its own jail, usually called a county detention center, through the county sheriff's office. There is no statewide county jail search, so you have to find the roster for the specific county where the arrest happened.

If you know the county, search for that county's detention center roster directly, or find the facility on InmateAid and use the search link on its page. The largest county systems, where most arrests happen, are Greenville, Richland (Columbia), Charleston, Horry (Myrtle Beach), Spartanburg, and Lexington. The bigger counties post online jail rosters that update through the day; smaller rural counties may not post online at all, in which case calling the detention center is the fastest route.

To search a county roster you typically need the person's full name. A booking number, if you have it, finds the record immediately. If you are not certain which county made the arrest, the city where it happened tells you: look up which county that city sits in, then search that county's detention center.

Federal inmates in South Carolina (BOP)

If the charge was federal, the person is in the custody of the federal Bureau of Prisons, not the state, and you search the BOP's own national inmate locator rather than any South Carolina tool. It covers everyone in federal custody from 1982 to the present and searches by name or by federal register number.

South Carolina has four federal prisons, all medium-security with adjacent minimum-security camps: FCI Bennettsville in the northeast near the North Carolina line, FCI Edgefield in the west near Augusta, FCI Estill in the south, and FCI Williamsburg in Salters. A person arrested on a federal charge may first be held in a county jail under a federal contract, held for the US Marshals, before being moved to one of these. So if the BOP locator does not show your person yet, check the county jail where the arrest happened and call the US Marshals if you are unsure.

ICE detainees in South Carolina

If the person is being held on an immigration matter, they are in ICE custody, which is a civil detention system separate from criminal jail and prison. ICE detainees are not criminals serving sentences; they are held while their immigration cases are decided. You search for them using the federal ICE Online Detainee Locator, which works by the detainee's A-Number (a nine-digit immigration identification number) or by their full name, country of birth, and date of birth.

Here is the part that catches families off guard. South Carolina does not have a long-term ICE detention center. When ICE detains someone in the state, the person is typically held for a short time in a county jail, such as the Lexington County or York County detention centers, or in a federal holding room, and is then transferred out of state for longer detention. Most South Carolina detainees end up at ICE facilities in Georgia, including the Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin and the Folkston ICE Processing Center, and some are sent as far as Louisiana or Texas. Because of this, the person you are looking for may move quickly and may not be in South Carolina at all by the time you start searching. Use the A-Number in the ICE locator, because it is the most reliable way to find someone and to keep track of them once they leave the state.

When you cannot find them anywhere

If you have searched and your person is not turning up, work through these explanations before assuming the worst.

The booking is not complete yet. Newly arrested people can take hours to appear on a roster, and newly sentenced people can sit in a county jail for weeks before showing up in the state system. Try again later. They were released, transferred, or moved between systems. Someone can post bond, get transferred to another county, or be handed from county to federal or immigration custody and moved out of state, and during the handoff they may briefly appear nowhere. Immigration detainees in particular get moved out of state quickly. The name does not match the record. People are booked under legal names, middle names, maiden names, or misspellings. Try variations, and search with less information rather than more. They are a minor. Juveniles are not listed in public adult locators at all, regardless of facility.

When the online tools fail, calling works. Call the jail or facility you believe is holding them, give the full name and date of birth, and ask the booking desk or records office to confirm custody status. That is often faster than any website.

Get notified automatically: VINELink

Rather than checking rosters over and over, you can register with VINE, the free victim and family notification service South Carolina participates in. It lets you look up a person's custody status and sign up for automatic alerts about changes such as transfer or release. It is the simplest way to stop refreshing a website every day.

Once you have found them

Finding the person is the first step. Staying connected is the next, and it matters more than most families realize for how someone gets through their time.

The best place to start is mail. Letters and photos reach almost everyone in custody, they are the most reliable form of contact, and a person who hears from home regularly does easier time. Phone calls are the next layer, and South Carolina is reasonably affordable here. State prison calls are billed at a low flat rate per minute to anywhere in the country through the state's phone vendor, and the federal rate caps that took effect in April 2026 hold costs down further. A couple of practical notes: state prison phones are outgoing only, so your person calls you rather than the other way around, and each person can keep a limited list of approved numbers, so make sure yours is on it. County detention centers set their own rates and use their own vendors. You can also send money to most facilities so your person can cover phone time, commissary, and basic needs.

To set any of this up for the specific facility holding your loved one, find that facility on InmateAid and follow the instructions on its page, since the rules, the phone carrier, and the mailing address are different at every facility. For someone held in immigration custody, remember to include the A-Number on mail and deposits, and keep in mind they may already be at a facility in another state.

[Internal link block to render at foot of article:]

- See every prison, jail, and detention center in South Carolina: /prisons/south-carolina

- Understand the new 2026 call rates: link to FCC Prison Phone Rate Caps 2026 guide

- Search arrest records across South Carolina: Arrest Record Search (honestly labeled affiliate)

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Frequently asked questions

How do I find an inmate in South Carolina?

Decide which system holds them first. Recently arrested people are in the county detention center where the arrest happened. People serving state prison time are in the South Carolina Department of Corrections. Federal charges mean the Bureau of Prisons, and immigration holds mean ICE. Search the matching system by name.

Is there one website for all SC inmates?

No. South Carolina has no single combined database. County detention centers, the state prison system, the federal Bureau of Prisons, and ICE each maintain separate searches, and you have to use the one that matches the person's situation.

Where is someone just arrested in South Carolina?

In the county detention center for the county where the arrest happened, not in state prison. People only enter the state prison system after sentencing and transfer, which can take weeks.

How do I search the South Carolina DOC?

Use the SCDC Incarcerated Inmate Search with the person's name, SCDC number, or SID. The name search uses phonetic matching, so it forgives spelling. Results show the current facility, offense, status, and projected release date.

What is an SCDC number?

It is the inmate identification number the South Carolina Department of Corrections assigns to each person in state custody. Searching by SCDC number, or by the State Identification (SID) number, is the most precise way to find a state inmate.

Why can I not find my inmate in the state system?

The most common reason is that they are not in state prison. The state search only covers people currently held by SCDC. It does not show people in county detention, on parole or probation, juveniles, or anyone released. Newly sentenced people also sit in county jails for a while before transferring.

How do I find someone in a SC county jail?

Find the roster for the specific county where the arrest happened, since each of the 46 counties runs its own detention center. If you know the city, look up which county it is in, then search that county's detention center.

Are there federal prisons in South Carolina?

Yes, four. FCI Bennettsville, FCI Edgefield, FCI Estill, and FCI Williamsburg are all medium-security federal prisons with adjacent minimum-security camps.

How do I find a federal inmate in South Carolina?

Use the federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locator, which is national and searches by name or federal register number. Someone arrested on a federal charge may be held in a county jail for the US Marshals before being moved to a federal prison.

How do I find someone in ICE custody in SC?

Use the ICE Online Detainee Locator, searching by the detainee's A-Number or by full name, country of birth, and date of birth. Because South Carolina has no long-term ICE facility, your person was likely moved out of state, often to a center in Georgia.

Does South Carolina have an ICE detention center?

No long-term one. ICE detains people briefly in county jails or federal holding rooms in South Carolina, then transfers them out of state for longer detention, most often to facilities in Georgia such as Stewart or Folkston, and sometimes to Louisiana or Texas.

Can I get alerts when an inmate status changes?

Yes. Register with VINE, the free notification service, to get automatic alerts about transfers and releases instead of checking rosters manually.

What if no search finds the person?

Try again later in case booking or state intake is not complete, try name variations, and remember minors are never listed publicly. If your person was in immigration custody, they were probably moved out of state, so search the ICE locator by A-Number. If the websites fail, call the facility directly with the full name and date of birth. =====================================================

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