Nevada Youth Training Center (NYTC) in Elko, Nevada is a state juvenile facility operated under the Nevada juvenile justice authority. Youth held here are in state custody, and visitation is governed by both facility rules and the broader juvenile justice system, including the court and the assigned case manager. Visiting rules are designed around the youth's treatment plan and family reunification goals. Before traveling, call 775-748-6200 to confirm the current schedule and your status on the approved visitor list.
Approved visitors typically include parents, legal guardians, custodial grandparents, and siblings. Extended family may be approved through the case manager. Foster parents and child welfare caseworkers are usually pre-approved through their professional role. Attorneys, CASA volunteers, and clergy have separate access channels. Minor siblings often require a parent or guardian to accompany them. To be added to the approved visitor list, the parent or legal guardian usually submits a written request to the facility's case management team.
Most state juvenile facilities schedule visits on weekends and selected weekday evenings. Visits are often held in a structured visiting area, and many facilities offer family programming such as scheduled family therapy and meetings with the youth's treatment team. Contact visits are the norm, though non-contact rules may apply during disciplinary status. Call 775-748-6200 for the current schedule and whether family programming is offered alongside standard visits.
Bring a valid government-issued photo ID. Custodial parents and guardians may also need legal documentation establishing custody, especially in shared-custody situations. Dress code is enforced: no revealing attire, no clothing that resembles staff or resident uniforms, no items that could be passed to the youth. Leave phones, bags, and personal items in your vehicle or lobby lockers.
Every youth at Nevada Youth Training Center (NYTC) is assigned a case manager who coordinates the treatment plan, education, court reporting, and release planning. The case manager is the family's most important point of contact. They can approve additional visitors, schedule family therapy, arrange phone calls outside standard hours, and provide updates on the youth's progress. Building a working relationship with the case manager often does more for family contact than any formal visitation rule. Ask for the case manager's name when you call 775-748-6200.
As a youth progresses through the program, the facility and the court may approve home visits, weekend passes, or extended reunification time with parents or guardians. These passes typically require approval from the case manager, the facility administrator, and sometimes the judge. Home visits are part of the reunification process, not a reward, and they come with conditions, including curfews and continued program compliance.
For information on phone discount plans and mail support for state juvenile facilities, see InmateAid's services and call 775-748-6200.
Youth will be allowed their first visit after they have been at NYTC for 28 days. Visits are allowed once a month after the first visit. All visits are subject to behavior. Certain circumstances may warrant staff supervised visits on campus.
All visits must be approved by the Superintendent. Assistant Head Group Supervisors must submit a written request that includes all persons visiting and the date(s) they will be visiting. Only immediate family (mother, father, brothers and sisters, grandparents if they are a guardian) may visit unless prior approval has been given.
On campus visits will be supervised and in a designated area (Frontier Dorm). These visits will be limited to no more than immediate family members.
Times of visitation are between the hours of 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. No overnight visits are allowed.
Visiting, either by phone or in person, with anyone that has not been approved, is a violation of the visitation policy, and will result in sanctions.
All visitors are expected to be dressed conservatively and appropriately. Failure to do so may delay the visit. No halter tops, extremely short skirts or shorts, gang related clothing, or sheer material is permitted.
Visitors who are observed to be under the influence of drugs and/or alcohol, or are abusive to youth or NYTC staff in any way, may have their visitation privileges suspended and/or terminated.