Reviewed on: April 08,2026
Commissary

Do One-time charges Count Against the BOP Spending Limit?

At fort Dix will 1 time purchases like radio, headphones, or email/phone minutes count towards the $320 monthly spending limit?

Understanding what counts against the $320 monthly commissary limit at Fort Dix helps families plan funding more effectively and ensures the inmate has access
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer August 22,2015 · Commissary
1

Understanding what counts against the $320 monthly commissary limit at Fort Dix helps families plan funding more effectively and ensures the inmate has access to both the goods and the communication services they need without one cutting into the other.

Physical items purchased through the commissary, including electronics like radios and headphones, clothing items like sneakers, food, hygiene products, and other approved goods, all count toward the monthly cap. These purchases are tracked within the commissary system and spending stops once the limit is reached for the month, regardless of the trust account balance.

Phone minutes and email credits operate through entirely separate systems. Phone calls at Fort Dix go through the BOP's contracted telecommunications provider, and that account is funded and tracked independently from the commissary. The same applies to email through the TRULINCS system, which has its own balance separate from commissary funds. Spending on calls and emails does not reduce the amount available for commissary purchases and vice versa.

This separation is practical for families to understand because it means the $320 commissary budget can be reserved for goods while communication costs are managed through the appropriate phone and email accounts. For an inmate just arriving at Fort Dix, the priority one-time purchases tend to be sneakers, a radio, and headphones, all of which come out of commissary. Getting those in early in the month before the budget is spent on consumables is worth planning around.

Accepted Answer Date Created: August 22,2015
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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.