Reviewed on: April 21,2026
Visitation

How Do I Arrange a Special Visit Coming From Another State?

I am going to be coming from another state 14 hours away to visit my son, How can I be sure of the times and length of the visit times?

Most facilities have a provision specifically for situations like yours, commonly referred to as a special visit or extended visit for out-of-town family.
Ask The Inmate
Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer December 23,2015 · Visitation
1

Most facilities have a provision specifically for situations like yours, commonly referred to as a special visit or extended visit for out-of-town family. The distance you are traveling qualifies you to request this. It is not automatic, but it is a recognized accommodation that facilities are generally willing to arrange when the request is made properly in advance.

Do not just show up and hope for the best. Call the facility before you make the trip and ask to speak with your son's case manager, unit counselor, or the unit team secretary. Explain that you are traveling from out of state, give them the distance, and ask about the process for scheduling a special visit. They will walk you through whatever paperwork or advance approval is required and tell you exactly what the extended time options look like.

Getting that confirmation before you leave is essential. You want the visit on the books, the duration confirmed, and any approval in hand before you commit to a 14-hour drive. Showing up without a pre-arranged special visit means you may be limited to the standard visiting hours along with everyone else, which may not justify the travel.

Accepted Answer Date Created: December 23,2015
Was this helpful?

My situation is different — ask your own question.

Our advisors answer within 24 hours. Free, always. Former federal and state inmates with direct experience.

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.