Land O’ Lakes Florida Jail Inmate Search, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026

Land O’ Lakes Florida Jail Inmate Search, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026
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Pasco County Corrections in Land O’ Lakes: Inmate Lookup, Visiting & Records 2026

This guide explains how to complete a Land O’ Lakes Florida jail inmate search, use the official Pasco Corrections “In Custody” lookup, understand bail and release questions, send compliant Securus digital mail, use JailATM messaging and deposits, schedule ICSolutions video visits, and follow Pasco County court records without trusting outdated jail-directory pages.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Pursuant to Florida public record practices and Pasco County correctional procedures, this page is for informational use only. A jail roster entry, charge description, booking status, inmate ID, bond note, past-arrest record, or court-record listing is not a conviction. All arrestees and detainees are presumed innocent unless adjudicated guilty by a court of competent jurisdiction. Always verify custody, release eligibility, bond status, court dates, visitation approval, mail rules, deposit procedures, and legal deadlines directly with Pasco County Corrections, the Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller, the appropriate court, or qualified legal counsel.

The phrase “Land O’ Lakes Florida jail inmate search” almost always refers to Pasco County Corrections, located at 20101 Central Blvd. in Land O’ Lakes, Florida. This is the central county jail operation serving Pasco County, not a small municipal lockup. People search for this facility when someone has been arrested in Pasco County, when a family member is trying to confirm booking status, when a bondsman needs an inmate ID or charge information, when a lawyer needs to locate a client, or when a victim wants custody notification.

The key point is simple: do not treat every jail website as equal. Pasco County Government maintains official Pasco Corrections pages, and the active inmate roster is accessed through the Pasco Corrections “In Custody” system. The Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller maintains court records, including criminal case records that may be public unless sealed, expunged, or confidential by law. Those are different systems. The jail record tells you who is in custody or recently arrested. The court record tells you what the court has filed, scheduled, sealed, dismissed, amended, or ordered.

Families lose time and money when they skip that distinction. A person can be booked in the jail before the court docket is fully updated. A bond amount can appear incomplete if another hold exists. Personal mail can be rejected if it is sent to the jail instead of the Securus Digital Mail Center. A book or publication can be returned because Pasco’s current inmate services page states that outside publications are not permitted. A visitor can fail a video visit because they did not set up the ICSolutions account, test the device, or follow facility rules. This page is designed to stop those mistakes before they happen.

📍 Main Jail Address

Facility:
Pasco County Corrections / Pasco County Jail

Physical Location:
20101 Central Blvd.
Land O’ Lakes, FL 34637

Use this for: facility location, legal/privileged mail destination, government-issued checks, approved special items, map directions, and official custody context. Do not use this address for ordinary personal mail unless Pasco County Corrections specifically changes the current digital-mail process.

📞 Department Contacts

Pasco County Corrections Contact:
(813) 235-6003

Resource & Visitation Building:
813-996-6982, ext. 6419

Trinity Commissary at Jail:
(813) 235-6053

ICSolutions Visitor Support:
1-888-506-8407

🎥 Visitation Building

Pasco County Resource and Visitation Building:
10326 Asbel Road
Land O’ Lakes, FL 34637

System:
ICSolutions Advanced Technology – The Visitor™ Video Visitation

Important: Visitors must create an ICSolutions prepaid account and register before participating in video visitation.

⚖️ Court Record Contacts

Robert D. Sumner Judicial Center:
38053 Live Oak Avenue, Suite 210
Dade City, FL 33523-3805
Phone: (352) 521-4542

West Pasco Judicial Center:
7530 Little Road, Suite 106
New Port Richey, FL 34654-5598
Phone: (727) 847-8031

II. Pasco Corrections vs Pasco Sheriff vs Pasco Clerk Records

A major source of confusion is that older pages still describe the jail as if it were managed only through the Sheriff’s Office. Current official county pages identify Pasco Corrections as a Pasco County Government corrections department. For everyday users, the practical rule is this: use Pasco Corrections for jail custody, inmate services, visitation, mail, digital communication, commissary, PREA information, and correctional facility rules. Use the Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller for court records, criminal case files, docket information, certified copies, court payments, sealing or expungement information, and in-person court-record viewing.

This separation is not bureaucratic trivia. If you call the wrong office, you may get no answer or the wrong answer. A jail staff member cannot rewrite a court order. A court clerk cannot schedule an ICSolutions video visit. A visitation vendor cannot explain whether a criminal case is sealed. A commissary vendor cannot tell you whether a bond hold exists. Every system has a lane, and accurate action depends on staying in the right lane.

Common user error: Do not assume the jail, court, clerk, bondsman, visitation vendor, commissary vendor, and Sheriff’s Office all share one customer-service desk. They do not. Confirm the correct agency before paying money or driving to Land O’ Lakes.

For search intent, “Land O’ Lakes Florida jail” is the location phrase. “Pasco County Corrections” is the operating department phrase. “Pasco County Jail” is the common public phrase. “In Custody” is the official current-roster action. “Past Arrests” is the historical-booking action. “Pasco Clerk criminal court records” is the court-follow-up action. A complete user workflow needs all of them, not just a single inmate-search button.

III. Bail Bonds, Court Holds & Pre-Trial Release Procedures

Bail in Pasco County should be treated as a court-controlled release issue, not a simple customer checkout. The jail may show or confirm custody and status information, but release eligibility can be affected by court orders, warrants, detainers, no-bond statuses, probation matters, domestic-violence conditions, failure-to-appear cases, out-of-county warrants, out-of-state holds, federal holds, immigration issues, medical restrictions, or pending first appearance. A listed bond on one charge does not guarantee release if another hold exists.

A licensed bail bond agency may assist with a surety bond, while some cases may involve cash bond, recognizance release, supervised release, pretrial conditions, or no release until judicial review. The correct question is not “How much money do I need?” The correct question is “What exact case, charge, hold, and court order controls release?” Families who skip that question often pay fees, sign collateral documents, or give money to a third party before learning that the person cannot be released yet.

Bail-processing warning: Posting bond does not mean immediate release. Release can still require identity verification, court paperwork, warrant checks, classification clearance, medical review, housing-unit movement, property processing, and final staff approval.

Before paying any bondsman, ask for the booking number, inmate ID, exact charge, case number, bond amount, court division, and whether all holds have been cleared. Ask whether the premium is refundable, whether collateral is required, what happens if the defendant misses court, and whether the bond covers every active case. Do not accept vague answers. A legitimate professional should be able to explain the difference between the jail record, the court docket, the bond obligation, and release processing.

For court follow-up, use the Pasco County Clerk’s criminal court page and online court records search. The Clerk states that felony, misdemeanor, and criminal traffic case files are available for public viewing unless sealed, expunged, or confidential by law. That caveat matters. If a record is sealed, expunged, confidential, juvenile, protected, or otherwise restricted, online access can be limited even when a jail event occurred.

IV. Inmate Communications: Phone Calls, JailATM, Tablets & eMessaging

Pasco County inmate communication now relies heavily on digital systems. The official inmate services page states that inmates at the Pasco County Correctional Facility have access to ICSolutions wireless tablets, giving families and incarcerated individuals more ways to stay connected. To create an account for messaging and related services, Pasco directs users to JailATM or JailATM.com. That means communication is not handled by dropping off notes, asking front-desk staff to pass messages, or mailing informal materials to the jail.

Pasco’s eMessaging process allows family and friends to send email-like messages through JailATM. Users must create a JailATM account, log in, and use the eMessaging system. Messages are sent and received from the user’s inbox on the website or JailATM mobile app. Friends and family pay per message or photo uploaded, and inmates may also pay for messages or request that the receiving party pay the cost of viewing a message. Pasco’s posted fees identify messages at $0.25 per send up to 5,000 characters and photos at $0.25 per upload.

All messages and photos are subject to facility review. If a message, photo, or inmate reply is rejected, the user receives a rejection message with the reason, and fees are not refunded if messages or attachments are rejected. That is not a technicality. Do not send photos, jokes, screenshots, arguments, case facts, threats, coded language, gang references, sexual content, drug references, weapon references, victim contact, co-defendant discussion, or anything that could violate court conditions.

Digital communication checklist:
  • Confirm the person is currently in Pasco custody before funding any account.
  • Use the inmate’s correct ID number when creating JailATM or related accounts.
  • Separate eMessaging funds, phone/tablet funds, commissary funds, care packs, and bond money.
  • Expect messages and photos to be reviewed by the facility.
  • Do not discuss facts of the criminal case through ordinary jail communication channels.

Pasco also lists voicemail options. Friends and family members can call and leave a voicemail message if they have a prepaid account with available funds. The user may be prompted to provide the inmate’s ID number and the PIN selected for the prepaid account. Pasco’s inmate services page states recorded voicemails are charged at $1.00 per minute and are subject to recording. Treat voicemail the same way you treat calls and messages: keep it practical, non-case-related, and short.

The ruthless rule is this: never put legal strategy into jail communications unless you are operating through a privileged legal channel. Calls, messages, photos, and voicemails can be reviewed, rejected, charged, recorded, or misunderstood. If the inmate needs legal advice, contact counsel. If the inmate needs money, use the correct vendor. If the inmate needs medical attention, call the facility and use the correct reporting route. Do not turn a message inbox into a criminal-case evidence trail.

V. Securus Digital Mail, Privileged Mail, Publications & Contraband

Pasco County mail rules are strict and unusually important. Pasco’s mail guidance states that personal mail is no longer accepted directly by Pasco County Corrections. Instead, all personal mail must be sent to the Securus Digital Mail Center – Pasco County. Once received, mail is digitally scanned and made available for viewing on tablets and/or kiosks. If the envelope is not properly addressed, the mail may be returned or delayed.

Pasco County personal mail address:

Inmate Name and ID#
C/O Securus Digital Mail Center – Pasco County
P.O. Box 21507
Tampa, FL 33622-1507

Pictures and drawings may be accepted for scanning and delivered in the same manner, but Pasco warns they should not be placed on the reverse side of text documents if that would interfere with scanning. Paper larger than 8.5 x 11 inches and non-paper items can be returned. Packages and certified mail are returned to sender. Physical mail is destroyed 60 days after upload. If a sender wants personal mail returned, Pasco’s mail guidance says the sender must include a self-addressed, stamped envelope with the original mail.

Privileged mail and certain official items must be mailed directly to the facility. Pasco’s inmate services page identifies privileged mail as communications with public officials, governmental agencies, the Florida Bar, municipal, county, state, and federal courts, state attorneys, private attorneys, public defenders, legal aid organizations, agency clerks, government attorneys, correctional administrators of the grievance system, parole authority members, domestic violence organizations, adoption agencies, and child welfare agencies. Government-issued checks must also be addressed directly to the facility.

Privileged mail / approved direct-facility address:

Inmate Name and ID#
Pasco Corrections
20101 Central Blvd.
Land O’ Lakes, FL 34637

Special items listed in Pasco mail guidance, such as prescription glasses, contact lenses, contact lens solution, and hearing aid batteries, are treated differently from ordinary personal mail and must be addressed directly to the facility when permitted. Do not send medication, random packages, stamped envelopes, cash, personal checks, personal money orders, greeting-card inserts, stickers, glitter, electronics, clothing, food, or any object not clearly authorized. If the item cannot be scanned or is not permitted through a direct-facility category, expect return, delay, or rejection.

Publications are a critical trap. Pasco’s older mail guidance references publications from a publisher, distributor, or authorized retailer, but the current Pasco inmate services page states inmates are not permitted to receive publications from an outside source, and that any publication received by the mailroom will be returned to sender. It also states publications are available to inmates on tablets and through the inmate library. Therefore, do not order books, newspapers, magazines, Bibles, puzzle books, or printed publications for direct outside delivery unless Pasco Corrections confirms the rule has changed.

Contraband warning: Do not “decorate” Pasco jail mail. Plain, properly addressed, scannable paper is safest. Anything oversized, non-paper, hidden, coded, glued, stapled, stickered, scented, packaged, or not authorized can be rejected or returned.

VI. MyCarePack, Commissary, JailATM & Inmate Deposits

Pasco County inmate support uses several different systems, and families must not mix them up. Care packs, commissary questions, JailATM deposits, eMessaging, phone/tablet funds, and bond payments are separate categories. Pasco’s inmate services page states that friends and family can order a customized MyCarePack from the approved commissary menu. The posted limit is $75 in ordered items, with $7.95 for shipping and handling, and the processing fee is also listed as $7.95. One package per inmate per week may be ordered, and all Pasco County and MyCarePack restrictions still apply.

Pasco states that only commissary questions can be answered by Trinity Commissary at the jail, while care-pack ordering and care-pack questions must be directed to MyCarePack. The MyCarePack phone number listed on Pasco’s page is 866-643-9557, with Monday through Friday hours from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. That separation matters because the jail may not solve a vendor ordering problem, and the vendor may not solve a custody or housing restriction problem.

Care-pack facts from Pasco inmate services:
  • Care packs are ordered through MyCarePack.
  • The approved menu allows customization from commissary-menu items.
  • The posted item limit is $75, with shipping/handling and processing fees listed separately.
  • One package per inmate per week may be ordered.
  • Commissary questions at the jail go to Trinity Commissary: (813) 235-6053.
  • Care-pack ordering questions go to MyCarePack: 866-643-9557.

Tablet entertainment and additional digital media may require funds deposited through JailATM. Pasco states that educational, mental health, addiction recovery, personal development, employment, and religious content is available at no cost on tablets, while entertainment options such as music, movies, television shows, and games are available at additional cost. The inmate may need to transfer funds from commissary to phone/tablet time. This is exactly why families should ask the inmate what account type is actually needed before depositing money blindly.

Do not assume that a dollar deposited in one account solves every problem. A bond payment is not a commissary deposit. A commissary deposit is not a care pack. A care pack is not phone time. Phone/tablet funds are not court fines. Court financial obligations are not legal fees. The same person may need several types of support, but each one follows its own rules, vendor, fee structure, and refund limitations.

VII. Medical Care, Property Release & Special Approved Items

Medical care in a county jail is handled through correctional medical procedures, not family preference. Families should not drive to the facility with prescription medication and expect staff to accept it at a lobby window. If the concern is serious, call Pasco Corrections and provide exact details: inmate name, ID number, diagnosis, medication name, dosage, prescribing physician, pharmacy, allergies, seizure history, insulin needs, pregnancy concerns, detox risk, suicide-risk indicators, recent hospitalization, mobility limitations, or mental-health symptoms. Precision matters more than emotion.

Pasco’s mail guidance specifically identifies prescription glasses, contact lenses, contact lens solution, and hearing aid batteries as items that must be addressed directly to the facility. That does not mean every medical or personal item can be mailed or dropped off. It means certain listed items are treated differently from ordinary personal mail. When in doubt, call first, get the current procedure, and use the exact inmate name and ID number on the mailing label.

Property release is also a separate correctional process. Inmate property may be secured during booking and may require authorization, identification, staff approval, or release eligibility before anyone outside the facility can pick it up. Some property may be held as evidence, restricted for security reasons, connected to an investigation, or unavailable until final release. Do not assume phones, wallets, keys, cash, documents, jewelry, or clothing can be collected simply because a family member appears at the jail.

Vehicle impound questions are not the same as jail property. If a car was towed during arrest, the towing company, registered owner, arresting agency, proof of insurance, valid driver status, lienholder, evidence hold, or court order may control release. The jail may confirm where the person is held, but it may not control the tow yard or evidence hold. Before sending someone to retrieve a vehicle, identify the arresting agency and tow company.

Medical/property warning: Do not send medication, packages, or personal property through the Securus Digital Mail Center. Personal mail is scanned for digital delivery; physical items are not a shortcut into the facility.

VIII. ICSolutions Video Visitation Rules, Scheduling & Device Prep

Pasco County Corrections uses ICSolutions Advanced Technology – The Visitor™ video visitation system. The official ICSolutions Pasco page states that all visitors must create an ICSolutions prepaid account and register at no cost to participate in video visitation. To schedule a visit, visitors need to add funds to the ICSolutions prepaid account. Video visitation replaces traditional face-to-face visits through a glass partition by using video kiosks, allowing the inmate to remain in the housing unit while the visitor participates onsite or offsite.

Onsite video visitation is conducted using video terminals located in the facility’s visitation center. Pasco’s inmate services page identifies the Pasco County Resource and Visitation Building at 10326 Asbel Road, Land O’ Lakes, FL 34637, with a visitation-related extension at 6419. Do not drive to the main jail assuming that every visit is handled at the same public entrance. Confirm the exact building, appointment time, visitor approval, and identification requirement before travel.

Offsite visitation can be conducted from a personal Windows computer, Android device, or iOS device. ICSolutions states that offsite visitors must download and test the visitation application before scheduling or participating. Android users may use the ICS MOBILE app through Google Play, and iOS users may use the ICS MOBILE app through the Apple Store. Offsite visitation is fee-based, the cost varies by facility, and internet connectivity issues during offsite visits are not refunded.

Video visitation checklist:
  • Create and verify an ICSolutions account before trying to schedule.
  • Add funds if required for the type of visit you are scheduling.
  • Test the camera, microphone, speakers, app, browser, and internet connection before the visit.
  • Use the inmate’s correct name and ID information.
  • Arrive early for onsite video visits and bring valid government-issued photo identification.
  • Do not record, livestream, screenshot, rebroadcast, or add unauthorized participants.

Visitors should dress as if entering a courthouse. Even when a visit happens from home, it is still a correctional visit, not a casual video chat. Avoid revealing clothing, gang-related clothing, vulgar images, drug or alcohol references, masks or identity-disguising items, nudity, weapons, controlled substances, aggressive behavior, and case discussion. Facility and vendor rules can terminate or suspend visits for misconduct.

The hard truth is that most failed video visits are preventable. People fail to test the app, use weak Wi-Fi, forget login credentials, schedule the wrong inmate, let unauthorized people enter the screen, show prohibited items, dress poorly, or try to discuss the criminal case. A video visit is a privilege controlled by jail and vendor rules. Treat it that way.

IX. Pasco County Court Records, Criminal Cases & Case Follow-Up

After locating someone through the Pasco “In Custody” system, the next step is often court-record follow-up. The Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller provides an Online Court Records Search and topic-specific tools for court-record lookup. The Clerk’s criminal court page explains that felony, misdemeanor, and criminal traffic case files are available for public viewing unless sealed, expunged, or confidential by law. A sealed court file requires a court order before its contents can be viewed.

This is where many users make a damaging assumption. A jail record and a court record are not the same thing. The jail may list a booking charge before the court docket is fully created. The State Attorney may amend a charge. A judge may change conditions. A case may be sealed or expunged. A court date may be rescheduled. A criminal traffic matter may be in a different division than a felony matter. If you need reliable legal status, use the Clerk and court system, not just a jail screenshot.

Pasco court follow-up checklist:
  • Record the inmate name, ID number, booking date, and any visible charge or case number.
  • Search Pasco Clerk court records for criminal, misdemeanor, felony, or criminal traffic case information.
  • Check whether the case belongs to the Robert D. Sumner Judicial Center in Dade City or the West Pasco Judicial Center in New Port Richey.
  • Remember that sealed, expunged, confidential, juvenile, and protected records may not display publicly.
  • For legal advice, contact counsel rather than asking jail or clerk staff for strategy.

If a court record is not visible, do not assume the case does not exist. It may be too new, filed under a different spelling, restricted by law, in a different division, linked to a citation, pending prosecutor review, or not yet indexed online. Court clerks can provide procedural information, but they cannot act as your lawyer. For legal decisions about bond, plea, protective orders, probation, warrants, or sealing and expungement, get legal advice.

For victims, witnesses, family members, and employers, use careful language. “Booked” does not mean “convicted.” “Arrested” does not mean “sentenced.” “Bonded out” does not mean “case dismissed.” “Past arrest” does not mean “currently in jail.” Legal precision protects you from spreading false or incomplete information.

X. Legal Counsel & Visitor Precedents: Crucial Tips

⚠️ Do Not Mail Personal Letters to the Jail

Pasco personal mail goes to the Securus Digital Mail Center, not the main jail. Use the inmate name, ID number, and Tampa P.O. Box format. Sending personal mail to Central Blvd can delay or reject it.

💸 Separate Every Money Channel

MyCarePack, JailATM, commissary, phone/tablet funds, voicemail, and bond are not one account. Verify the exact need before depositing money, because vendor fees and rejected transactions may not be refunded.

👔 Test ICSolutions Before the Visit

Offsite visitors should test the app, camera, microphone, and internet connection before scheduling. ICSolutions warns that internet connection problems during offsite visits are not refunded.

📦 Do Not Send Books From Outside

Pasco’s current inmate services page says outside publications are not permitted and will be returned. Do not trust generic jail advice saying Amazon books are fine unless Pasco confirms a rule change.

XI. Facility Jurisdiction Map

Pasco County Corrections is located at 20101 Central Blvd. in Land O’ Lakes, Florida. The Resource and Visitation Building is separately listed at 10326 Asbel Road in Land O’ Lakes. Visitors should confirm whether they need the main corrections facility, the visitation building, a courthouse, the Clerk’s Office, a bondsman, or another agency location before driving.