Reviewed on: April 16,2026
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Why Are My Photos Being Rejected at a Federal Prison?

I tried to send a few pictures to terminal island but I don't think they're getting through. Is it because they're color copies and not on real photo stock ?

Yes, that is almost certainly the reason.
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer September 20,2015 · Send Inmate Mail
1

Yes, that is almost certainly the reason. Federal Bureau of Prisons facilities including Terminal Island have specific requirements for incoming photographs and color copies printed on regular paper do not meet them. A copy machine printout looks like a photo but it is not and the mailroom knows the difference immediately.

The BOP requires photographs to be printed on actual photo stock, meaning standard glossy or matte photographic paper of the kind produced by a print lab rather than a home or office printer. The distinction matters for a few reasons. Regular paper can be used to conceal contraband in ways that photo stock cannot. Photo stock also has a specific weight and finish that makes it easier for mailroom staff to verify what they are looking at quickly during inspection.

Beyond the paper type, size matters as well. Most BOP facilities accept standard 4 inch by 6 inch prints. Oversized photos or anything outside standard dimensions can be rejected regardless of what they are printed on. Content restrictions also apply. Photos cannot contain nudity, gang related imagery, or anything that violates the facility's incoming mail policy.

The simplest solution is to stop trying to send copies and use a service that prints on proper photo stock and ships directly to the facility. InmateAid's photo service prints on the exact specifications required by the BOP, which means the photos are formatted correctly, printed on the right material, and mailed in a way that meets federal mailroom requirements. The results look genuinely great and more importantly they actually get through.

Accepted Answer Date Created: September 20,2015
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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.