Reviewed on: April 02,2026
Send Inmate Mail

Will Mail Reach an Inmate Who Just Transferred Facilities?

I sent a letter to an inmate 2 days before he was moved to a new facility will that mail reach him?

It depends on where the letter was addressed when you sent it.
Ask The Inmate
Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer July 19,2013 · Send Inmate Mail
1

It depends on where the letter was addressed when you sent it.

If you sent the letter to the facility your inmate was leaving, it may not follow him. Facilities do not reliably forward mail to a transferring inmate's new location, and there is no postal forwarding system in place the way there would be for a regular home address change. Mail sent to the old facility after an inmate has been transferred often gets returned to sender.

If you sent the letter to the new facility with the correct address and inmate ID number already on it, it should arrive without any problem. The timing of the transfer versus when the letter was mailed matters less than where it was addressed.

When a letter sent through InmateAid comes back undeliverable for any reason, we research what happened, notify you with whatever information we have, and give you two options: resend the letter with corrected information, or receive a refund if the letter cannot be delivered.

The best way to avoid the uncertainty is to confirm the new facility address and inmate ID number before sending any mail during a transfer period. If your inmate is moving through a reception or classification center before landing at a permanent facility, it is worth waiting until placement is confirmed before sending anything you really want them to receive.

Accepted Answer Date Created: July 19,2013
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.