Reviewed on: April 16,2026
Relationship Issues

Can a Victim Visit the Inmate Who Harmed Them?

Do sone prison allow the victim to visit the inmate?

Yes, it is possible in some cases, but it requires navigating several layers of approval and the default position of most correctional systems is to keep
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer August 28,2015 · Relationship Issues
1

Yes, it is possible in some cases, but it requires navigating several layers of approval and the default position of most correctional systems is to keep victims and inmates separated unless both parties have made a deliberate and documented choice to have contact.

Most facilities have a process that allows any two parties, including a victim and the person who harmed them, to arrange contact if both consent and the facility approves it. This most commonly comes up in the context of restorative justice programs, which are structured processes designed to allow victims and offenders to communicate in a supervised and supported environment. These programs exist in a growing number of state and federal facilities and have shown meaningful results in terms of healing for both parties when approached carefully.

Outside of a formal restorative justice framework, a victim who wants to visit an inmate would need to go through the standard visitor approval process at the facility. That means being added to the approved visitor list, which the inmate controls. If the inmate adds the victim and the facility approves the addition, a visit is possible. Facilities may flag the relationship during the background check portion of visitor screening and some will require additional review before approving contact between a victim and the person convicted of harming them.

What facilities are designed to prevent is unwanted contact. If a victim has a no contact order in place or has not consented to communication, that protection remains firmly in place regardless of what the inmate requests.

The motivations for a victim wanting to visit vary widely. Some seek answers, some seek closure, and some have complicated relationships with the person inside that predate the offense. Restorative justice coordinators at the facility are the right starting point for anyone considering this path.

Accepted Answer Date Created: August 28,2015
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About this answer: This response was prepared by InmateAid’s editorial team in consultation with former inmates who have direct experience with the federal correctional system. InmateAid has served families of the incarcerated since 2012. This is general information only — not legal advice. Last reviewed April 2026.