: Palm Beach Jail Inmate Search, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026

Palm Beach Jail Inmate Search, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026
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Palm Beach County Jail: PBSO Inmate Lookup, Bail, Visiting & Records 2026

This guide explains how to complete a Palm Beach jail inmate search through the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, confirm whether a person is housed at the Main Detention Center or West Detention Center, understand bail and release processing, send postcard-only mail, use video visitation, fund commissary, order MyCarePack items, and follow criminal case records through the Palm Beach County Clerk.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Pursuant to Florida public record practices and Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office correctional procedures, this page is for informational use only. A jail roster entry, booking search result, inmate jacket number, cell assignment, mugshot, charge description, bond note, or court-date reference 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 availability, mail rules, deposit procedures, and legal deadlines directly with PBSO, the Palm Beach County Clerk & Comptroller, the appropriate court, or qualified legal counsel.

The Palm Beach County jail system is operated by the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office. Most users searching for “Palm Beach jail inmate search” are trying to answer one urgent question: is this person in custody, and what should I do next? The answer depends on the official PBSO booking record, the inmate’s booked name, jacket number, cell assignment, facility location, bond or hold status, and the court case connected to the arrest.

Palm Beach County has more than one detention facility. The Main Detention Center is located at the Sheriff’s Headquarters Complex on Gun Club Road in West Palm Beach. The West Detention Center is located in Belle Glade. Video visitation is handled through public visitation centers, not by simply walking into a housing unit. Personal inmate mail is heavily restricted and generally must be postcard-only, except for privileged mail. Commissary, care packs, and deposits are also vendor-driven. If you guess instead of verifying, you can waste money, lose a visit, or have mail returned.

This page is not a thin jail-directory entry. It is a practical workflow for people who need to search PBSO bookings, confirm facility location, avoid postcard-mail mistakes, understand why a bond payment may not mean immediate release, use the correct video visitation center, separate commissary funds from bond money, and cross-check court status through Palm Beach Clerk eCaseView.

📍 Main Detention Center

Facility:
Palm Beach County Main Detention Center

Physical Location:
3228 Gun Club Road
West Palm Beach, FL 33406-3001

Main Phone:
(561) 688-4401

Administration:
(561) 688-4400

Inmate Records:
(561) 688-4340

📍 West Detention Center

Facility:
Palm Beach County West Detention Center

Physical Location:
38811 James Wheeler Way
Belle Glade, FL 33430

Main Phone:
(561) 712-2971

Use this for: western-county facility confirmation, facility-specific mail, visitation location context, and custody questions when an inmate is housed in Belle Glade.

🎥 Video Visitation Centers

Central Video Visitation Center:
9620 Weisman Way
West Palm Beach, FL 33411
(561) 242-5850

West County Video Visitation Center:
2890 State Road 15
Belle Glade, FL 33430
(561) 992-1250

⚖️ Court Records

Palm Beach Clerk & Comptroller:
Court records and eCaseView access for civil, criminal, and traffic cases filed in Palm Beach County.

Use this for: charges, dispositions, sentences, court dates, complaints, parties, case documents, certified copies, and official docket follow-up.

II. Main Detention Center vs West Detention Center

The Main Detention Center and West Detention Center serve different operational needs within the PBSO correctional system. The Main Detention Center is the largest PBSO correctional facility, located on Gun Club Road in West Palm Beach. PBSO describes it as the facility with the greatest security capabilities and notes that it houses high-risk inmates, federal inmates, inmates needing special medical or mental-health care, and inmates who cannot function at another facility. It also houses pre-trial un-sentenced adult males, adult females, and juveniles in the correctional system.

The West Detention Center is located in Belle Glade, about forty-five miles west of PBSO headquarters. PBSO describes it as a facility housing all custody levels, including minimum, medium, and maximum custody inmates. It also has a program-oriented direct-supervision model and a video visitation program. If your family member is housed in Belle Glade, do not assume that every West Palm Beach address, phone number, or visitation expectation applies without checking.

Facility-check warning: Palm Beach County users often say “Palm Beach jail” when they mean either Main Detention Center or West Detention Center. Confirm the housing location before mailing a postcard, paying a vendor, planning a visit, or driving to the wrong side of the county.

This distinction also affects mailing addresses. Main Detention Center inmate mail uses a West Palm Beach P.O. Box, while West Detention Center inmate mail uses a Belle Glade P.O. Box. Publications must include the inmate’s booked name, jacket number, and cell assignment. If you send mail to the wrong facility, omit the jacket number, omit the cell assignment, or use a non-compliant format, the mail can be refused or returned.

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

Bail in Palm Beach County should be treated as a court-controlled release issue, not a simple payment errand. An inmate may have a bond amount on one charge while another hold, warrant, no-bond order, probation issue, out-of-county case, federal matter, immigration detainer, domestic-violence condition, or medical/classification restriction prevents immediate release. Before paying a bondsman or deposit service, confirm whether every active custody reason is cleared by the payment.

Family members should record the booked name, jacket number, booking date, charges, court division, bond amount, and any hold language shown in the official record. Then cross-check the Palm Beach Clerk court record through eCaseView. Jail staff can provide public custody and procedure information, but they cannot give legal strategy. A bondsman may explain surety-bond terms, but a bondsman is not the court and not your lawyer. A court clerk can explain records and payment procedure, but not advise whether a defendant should bond out.

Bond verification checklist:
  • Confirm the inmate is currently in PBSO custody.
  • Write down the booked name, jacket number, and facility location.
  • Check whether there are multiple charges, holds, warrants, or no-bond statuses.
  • Review court information through Palm Beach Clerk eCaseView.
  • Ask whether release conditions include no contact, GPS, firearm restrictions, substance restrictions, or supervision.
  • Get all bond fees, collateral obligations, refund rules, and failure-to-appear consequences in writing.

Release timing can also create confusion. Posting bond does not mean the person walks out immediately. Release processing can require payment verification, court paperwork, warrant checks, identity review, housing movement, medical clearance, property processing, staff review, and transportation logistics. High-volume booking periods, court returns, shift changes, and multiple-case paperwork can extend the wait.

Bail-processing warning: The dangerous assumption is “one payment clears everything.” The better question is “Does this payment clear every active hold, warrant, and court order?” Ask before money changes hands.

IV. Inmate Email, Calls & Video Communication

PBSO provides an inmate email notice and links users to video visitation registration and scheduling. For practical purposes, families should separate communication into categories: phone calls, email-style messaging, postcard mail, video visits, privileged legal communication, and professional attorney contact. These channels are not interchangeable. A message to a family account is not privileged legal communication. A postcard is not a court filing. A video visit is not private legal strategy.

Inmates generally cannot receive normal incoming personal calls like someone at home. Communication usually starts when the inmate places an outgoing call, sends an approved message, receives approved mail, or participates in scheduled video visitation. If you are not receiving calls, do not assume the inmate is refusing contact. They may be in intake, housing movement, court transport, medical care, disciplinary restriction, lockdown, classification review, or unable to access the relevant system.

Communication checklist:
  • Confirm the inmate’s current facility before creating accounts or scheduling visits.
  • Use the booked name, jacket number, and cell assignment where required.
  • Use the official PBSO inmate email notice or visitation scheduling link rather than random search ads.
  • Do not confuse video visitation, email notice, postcard mail, phone deposits, commissary deposits, and bond.
  • Expect ordinary communications to be monitored, reviewed, or recorded unless properly privileged.
  • For attorney matters, use qualified legal channels instead of ordinary family communication tools.

Do not discuss alleged facts of the case, witnesses, victims, co-defendants, firearms, drugs, vehicles, hidden property, money movement, social media posts, protective orders, no-contact orders, or strategy through ordinary jail communications. Florida jail calls, messages, and video visits can create evidence. The disciplined move is short, practical, non-case-related communication. The legal move is attorney-client contact.

V. Postcard Mail, Books, Publications & Contraband

Palm Beach County inmate mail is strict. PBSO states that all incoming mail, except privileged mail, must be in postcard form only. Letters inside envelopes are not accepted and are returned to the sender. Postcards must meet USPS-size rules, with a minimum size of 3.5 inches by 5 inches and a maximum size of 4.25 inches by 6 inches. Postcards must be handwritten or typed in black or blue ink. Acceptable money may still be mailed in an envelope if properly addressed to the facility.

Main Detention Center mail address:

Inmate’s Booked Name, Jacket Number, and Cell Assignment
P.O. Box 24716
West Palm Beach, FL 33416

West Detention Center mail address:

Inmate’s Booked Name, Jacket Number, and Cell Assignment
P.O. Box 1450
Belle Glade, FL 33430

Mail can be refused for several predictable reasons: the information on the outside is incorrect, the mail contains an unauthorized item, the inmate has been released or transferred and is no longer in PBSO custody, or the mail does not comply with facility rules. This is not a minor clerical issue. If the inmate’s booked name, jacket number, or cell assignment is wrong, your mail may fail even if your message itself is harmless.

Publications and periodicals must come directly from the publisher or a licensed commercial warehousing source. The mailing label must contain the inmate’s booked name, jacket number, and cell assignment. Only new softcover paperback books are accepted. There is a limit of four books, including religious books. Inmates may subscribe to no more than one daily or weekly newspaper and four periodicals. Do not send used books, hardback books, privately mailed books, or publications with security-risk content.

Contraband warning: Do not decorate Palm Beach jail mail. The safest personal mail is a compliant postcard, correct booked name, jacket number, cell assignment, black or blue ink, proper size, and no stickers, glitter, perfume, hidden objects, photos, envelopes, or unauthorized items.

VI. Commissary, Access Corrections & MyCarePack

PBSO allows friends and family to deposit funds into inmate commissary accounts through Access Corrections kiosks and SmartDeposit. Kiosks are located in the release lobby at the Main Detention Center, the Video Visitation Center, and the visitation lobby at the West Detention Center. The machines accept cash, credit cards, and debit cards. The Main Detention Center kiosk is available twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, while other locations depend on video visitation schedule availability.

Family and friends must know the inmate’s jacket number and full booked name to deposit funds. Kiosk deposits are credited to the inmate’s account, and receipts are issued. PBSO also states that monies deposited can be subject to normal collections for debts owed to the jail by the inmate, including bond money. This detail matters because a family may deposit funds expecting full commissary availability, then discover that deductions affect the usable balance.

Deposit facts from PBSO guidance:
  • Vendor pathway: Access Corrections / SmartDeposit.
  • Deposit phone option: 866-394-0490.
  • Kiosk locations include Main Detention Center release lobby, Video Visitation Center, and West Detention Center visitation lobby.
  • Main Detention Center kiosk is available twenty-four hours, seven days a week.
  • Family and friends need the inmate’s jacket number and full booked name.
  • A convenience fee may apply at kiosks, and deposits may be subject to jail debt collections.

PBSO also identifies the MyCarePack program. Family and friends can purchase pre-assembled care packs online through MyCarePack. PBSO’s FAQ lists a limit of one pack per fifteen days for each inmate, and packs are delivered on the inmate’s normal commissary delivery day. Customer service after an order is placed is listed at 866-643-9557. Do not confuse MyCarePack orders with commissary deposits, bond payments, phone deposits, or court costs.

Commissary purchases are housing-assignment driven. PBSO states each designated housing assignment has a designated canteen day, and inmates may order only on that day. The posted spending limit is $90 for clothing items and $90 on all additional items, for a total of $180. Depositing money after the commissary order window may not help until the next ordering cycle.

Money-channel warning: Commissary funds, MyCarePack orders, bond money, court costs, legal fees, and phone/message funds are different. Ask what the inmate actually needs before paying the wrong system.

VII. Medical Fees, Property Release & Special Issues

PBSO’s FAQ explains that inmates can be charged fees while in custody, including a daily fee, an initial processing fee, and various self-initiated medical fees. Posted examples include nurse clinic, medical clinic, dental clinic, prescription, reading glasses, and transport-to-own-doctor or medical-facility fees. This does not mean basic needs are denied if fees are unpaid, but it does mean deposits can be affected by jail financial obligations.

Families should not arrive with prescription medication, glasses, medical records, or special property expecting automatic acceptance. Call the facility first, explain the issue, and ask for the current procedure. Provide exact information: inmate’s booked name, jacket number, diagnosis, medication name, dosage, prescribing provider, pharmacy, allergies, seizure history, insulin needs, detox risk, pregnancy concerns, mental-health concerns, suicide-risk signs, mobility limitations, or recent hospitalization.

Property release is also a separate administrative process. Personal property may be inventoried at booking and held according to jail rules. Some property may be released, some may remain with the inmate, and some may be held as evidence, restricted by security rules, or tied to an investigation. When an inmate is released or transferred, PBSO’s FAQ states that personal property and account balance transfer or release as well. Do not assume a family member can collect property without authorization or proper identification.

Vehicle impound issues are separate from jail property. If a vehicle was towed during arrest, the towing company, registered owner, proof of insurance, valid driver status, arresting agency, evidence hold, lienholder, or court order may control release. The jail may confirm custody, but it may not control the tow yard or evidence hold.

Medical/property warning: The wrong move is showing up with medication, documents, or property and demanding acceptance. Call first, get the exact procedure, and use the inmate’s booked name and jacket number.

VIII. PBSO Video Visitation Rules, Registration & Centers

PBSO video visitation requires registration and scheduling. Visitors wishing to visit an inmate housed at either the Main Detention Center or the West Detention Center can choose between the Central Video Visitation Center in West Palm Beach and the West County Video Visitation Center in Belle Glade. PBSO links users to a dedicated visitation registration and scheduling system. Do not appear at a detention center assuming a face-to-face or walk-in visit will happen without registration.

The Central Video Visitation Center is located at 9620 Weisman Way, West Palm Beach, FL 33411, just west of the South Florida Fairgrounds. The posted phone number is (561) 242-5850. The West County Video Visitation Center is located at 2890 State Road 15, Belle Glade, FL 33430, with posted phone number (561) 992-1250. Use the center that fits the visit and confirm the inmate’s eligibility before travel.

Video visitation checklist:
  • Confirm the inmate’s facility and current visitation eligibility.
  • Register through the official PBSO visitation scheduling system.
  • Choose the Central Video Visitation Center or West County Video Visitation Center.
  • Bring valid identification and follow the rules and dress code.
  • Arrive early enough for check-in and security procedures.
  • Do not bring prohibited items or attempt to record, livestream, or screenshot a visit.
  • Do not discuss case facts, witnesses, victim contact, or legal strategy during ordinary visits.

Video visitation is still correctional visitation. Dress conservatively, use respectful behavior, supervise children, and avoid any clothing or conduct that can be treated as disruptive. If the inmate is in medical or mental-health status, high-risk classification, federal custody, lockdown, disciplinary restriction, or another special status, visitation may be limited or require additional coordination.

Visit cancellation warning: Failed Palm Beach visits are usually preventable: no registration, wrong center, no ID, late arrival, improper clothing, wrong inmate information, facility lockdown, or discussing prohibited case details on a monitored system.

IX. Palm Beach County Court Records, eCaseView & Case Follow-Up

The PBSO inmate search answers a custody question. Palm Beach Clerk court records answer a legal case question. The Clerk & Comptroller’s eCaseView allows public users to search and view detailed information about civil, criminal, and traffic cases filed in Palm Beach County, including charges, dispositions, sentences, court dates, complaints, parties, and more. This is the system users should check after confirming a jail booking.

Do not assume the jail charge is the final filed charge. A person can be booked before the State Attorney has finalized charges. A case may later be amended, dismissed, reduced, enhanced, transferred, sealed, expunged, or restricted. Florida also has confidentiality rules, including crime-victim protections and court-record restrictions. Some documents may be redacted, unavailable online, or viewable only through registered access or in-person procedures.

Court-record follow-up checklist:
  • Record the inmate’s booked name, jacket number, booking date, and charge information from PBSO.
  • Search Palm Beach Clerk eCaseView for criminal, civil, and traffic case information.
  • Compare jail charge labels with court charges, case numbers, court dates, and dispositions.
  • Do not treat a booking record as a conviction record.
  • Use certified copies if you need documents for legal, employment, immigration, or official use.
  • Speak with counsel for bond modification, protective orders, probation, warrants, plea decisions, or sealed/expunged matters.

If the court record is missing, do not assume the case does not exist. It may be too new, filed under a different spelling, restricted, confidential, sealed, juvenile-related, pending filing, or unavailable through your current access level. Clerk staff can help with procedural access, but they cannot give legal advice. The smart workflow is jail search for custody, Clerk search for docket, counsel for strategy.

X. Legal Counsel & Visitor Precedents: Crucial Tips

⚠️ Get the Jacket Number First

Palm Beach mail, publications, and commissary deposits can require the inmate’s jacket number and full booked name. If you skip this, you are guessing—and jail systems punish guessing.

💸 Deposits Can Be Reduced by Jail Debts

PBSO warns that deposited funds may be subject to normal collections for debts owed to the jail, including bond money. Do not promise the inmate that every deposited dollar will be spendable.

👔 Video Visit Means Still Official

A PBSO video visit is not a casual family call. Register properly, bring ID, dress conservatively, arrive early, and avoid case discussions on a monitored system.

📬 Personal Mail Is Postcard-Only

Ordinary letters in envelopes are returned. Use the correct postcard size, black or blue ink, booked name, jacket number, cell assignment, and the correct facility mail address.

XI. Facility Jurisdiction Map

The Palm Beach County Main Detention Center is located at 3228 Gun Club Road in West Palm Beach, Florida. This facility is part of the Sheriff’s Headquarters Complex and is the central reference point for many PBSO jail users. The West Detention Center is in Belle Glade, and video visitation may occur at either the Central Video Visitation Center or West County Video Visitation Center. Confirm the correct destination before driving.