Reviewed on: April 02,2026
Inmate Phone Calls

Why Can't My Inmate Call the New Discount Phone Number?

Hello. On May 8 I set up a discount telephone number. I received an email from Inmate Aid the next day advising that that my new number had bee activated. However, my inmate (who is in Creek County Jail) cannot get through when dialing this number. He has been trying for days, he's getting frustrated and I'm well beyond that. Please advise. The number you guys set me up with 918-512-1890

If your inmate is trying to dial the new number and cannot get through, the line itself is most likely working fine.
Ask The Inmate
Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer May 16,2013 · Inmate Phone Calls
1

If your inmate is trying to dial the new number and cannot get through, the line itself is most likely working fine. The issue is almost always on the facility's calling system end, and it comes down to how the inmate's phone account is funded.

Here is how the service actually works. InmateAid does not replace the jail's phone system. What we do is provide you with a local phone number that routes to your regular phone. The purpose is simple: instead of your inmate placing an expensive long-distance call to reach you, they dial a local number instead. The savings can be significant because jail and prison phone rates for long-distance calls are substantially higher than local rates.

But the inmate still needs a funded account on the facility's phone system to place any call at all, local or otherwise. There are typically two ways that account gets funded:

Commissary calling card. Money in the inmate's commissary account can be used to purchase phone time. The inmate would need to do this before the new number will work for them.

Direct bill account. A family member sets up an account directly with the facility's phone provider and loads money onto it from outside. That funded account is what the inmate draws from when they dial out.

One more thing worth knowing: if you previously had a long-distance account set up with the facility's phone provider, that is treated as a completely separate account from the new local number. The phone companies will not transfer balances between accounts. You will need to fund the new number independently.

Once the inmate's account has funds and the new local number is registered as an approved contact at the facility, calls should go through without issue.

Accepted Answer Date Created: May 16,2013
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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.