Pinellas County Jail Inmate Search, Bond, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026

Pinellas County Jail Inmate Search, Bond, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026
🏛️ Official Public Records & Statutory Information Directory
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Pinellas County Jail Inmate Search: Who’s In Jail, Bond, Mail & Visiting 2026

This guide explains how to use the official Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office jail search, confirm booking status, read custody details, post bond, send Smart Communications mail, schedule video visitation, add phone or commissary funds, and follow related court records through the Pinellas Clerk.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This page is a public-information guide only. A jail listing, arrest entry, charge label, booking record, docket number, or inmate-search result is not a conviction. All arrestees and detainees are presumed innocent unless and until adjudicated guilty in court. Always verify custody, release status, bond, mail rules, visitation, court dates, and legal requirements directly with the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, the Pinellas County Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller, or qualified legal counsel.

The Pinellas County Jail inmate search is the correct starting point when someone has been arrested in Clearwater, St. Petersburg, Largo, Pinellas Park, Tarpon Springs, Dunedin, Seminole, Gulfport, Safety Harbor, or another Pinellas County jurisdiction. People usually search for “Pinellas County jail inmate search” because they need a fast answer: is the person in jail, what is the booking status, what is the docket number, is bond available, and what must be done next?

The official Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office “Who’s In Jail” and inmate information resources should be used before any third-party arrest directory. Third-party pages may copy old jail data, omit recent releases, display stale booking screenshots, or confuse a criminal court case with a jail custody record. A jail search tells you custody and booking information. The court record tells you what has been filed, scheduled, adjudicated, sealed, or disposed in the Pinellas County court system.

The Pinellas County Jail is located at 14400 49th Street North in Clearwater, Florida. It is operated by the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office Department of Detention and Corrections. The jail uses Smart Communications for inmate messaging, personal mail scanning, phone credits through tablets or kiosks, and video visitation. That vendor detail matters because sending mail, photos, phone funds, or messages through the wrong system can delay help or cause rejection.

📍 Jail Facility

Facility:
Pinellas County Jail

Address:
14400 49th Street North
Clearwater, FL 33762

Use this for: legal mail, attorney-related procedures, jail location, inmate accounting, map directions, and official jail verification.

📞 Jail & Records Contacts

Inmate Records / Jail Information:
727-464-6415

PCSO Non-Emergency:
727-582-6200

Emergency:
Call or text 911 for crimes in progress, fires, critical medical events, serious crashes, active threats, or immediate danger.

📬 Sheriff Mailing Address

Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office:
P.O. Drawer 2500
Largo, FL 33779-2500

Important: This is the sheriff’s general mailing address. Do not use it for personal inmate mail unless PCSO specifically instructs you to do so.

🎥 Video Visitation

Provider:
Smart Communications / SmartInmate

Remote Visitation Hours:
8:00 a.m. – 10:00 p.m., seven days a week

Scheduling Window:
Minimum 24 hours in advance; maximum seven days in advance.

II. Booking Status, Docket Number, Charges & Release Notes

The docket number is one of the most important identifiers in Pinellas County jail procedures. PCSO requires inmate name and ID information for personal mail, and the bond page says users should have defendant information, docket number, and case number ready before attempting a credit or debit card bond payment. The docket number also helps separate people with similar names and helps you connect the jail entry to the court case.

Charge labels should be read cautiously. A booking charge is not a conviction. It is not always the final charge filed by the State Attorney. Prosecutors may amend the charge, decline a count, file additional counts, consolidate counts, reduce the case, or move the case into a diversion or other court track. The jail record shows custody and booking information; the Clerk record shows court activity.

Release notes can also be misunderstood. A person may have a bond listed on one charge but remain in custody because of another charge, a no-bond hold, a warrant, a probation violation, a child-support purge, an out-of-county hold, a federal hold, or a court order. Before telling a family member “just pay the bond,” check every docket line and every status note.

Release-status warning: If the record shows multiple charges, multiple docket numbers, or a child-support purge issue, do not assume one payment releases the inmate. Call Inmate Records or check the court record first.

III. Bond, GovPayNow, Cash Bond, Surety Bond & Purge Payments

Pinellas County provides several bond-related options. PCSO states that the jail accepts bond payments through the GovPayNow program and that credit or debit card bond payments can be applied up to $2,500 per charge. The Pay Location Code for inmate bond payments is 6343. Before using GovPayNow, have the defendant’s name, docket number, and case number ready.

Cash bonds are different. PCSO states that cash bonds are accepted in the full amount of the bond and require valid photo identification. Bank checks, Traveler’s Checks, and money orders must be made payable to the Clerk of the Circuit Court. No personal checks are accepted. This is not a place to improvise. The wrong payee, wrong amount, wrong person, wrong case number, or wrong payment type can delay release.

Surety bonds are accepted from registered bonding agents. PCSO says a list of registered bonding agents is available on electronic message boards in Intake Processing, kiosks in housing units, and Central Division’s public lobby. A surety bond normally involves a private bonding company, a premium, and possibly collateral or a responsible signer. Jail staff should not be treated as your legal or financial adviser.

Child-support purge payments are separate from criminal bond. If the inmate was arrested for failure to pay child support, the purge amount may need to be paid to facilitate release. This is a different payment lane than commissary, phone funds, court costs, or ordinary bond. Verify whether the case is criminal bond, child-support purge, or both before paying.

Before posting bond or purge, verify:
  • The defendant’s full legal name and docket number.
  • The case number and every listed charge.
  • The exact bond amount and whether credit/debit limits apply.
  • Whether there is a second hold, warrant, probation violation, or no-bond count.
  • Whether the issue is criminal bond, child-support purge, or another court order.
  • Whether release conditions include no contact, GPS, substance restrictions, weapons restrictions, or court supervision.

Posting bond does not create instant release. Staff may still need to verify payment, confirm identity, check for warrants, review paperwork, clear medical or classification status, process property, and complete release procedures. A receipt means a payment was made; it does not prove the inmate has left the facility.

IV. Phone Calls, Tablets & SmartInmate Messaging

Pinellas County inmates and detainees cannot receive incoming personal phone calls. PCSO states inmates may purchase credits from Smart Communications and place outgoing calls using assigned tablets or housing unit kiosks. Friends and family can add funds to an inmate’s Smart Communications account through SmartInmate. This is not the same as a commissary deposit or bond payment.

Inmate messaging is also available through Smart Communications. PCSO says SmartInmate allows family and friends to correspond electronically and send photos, and that inmates receive eight free messages per month. The system can be useful, but every ordinary message should be treated as non-private. Messages are stored on secure servers and may be subject to jail rules, review, or restriction.

Do not discuss the facts of the criminal case through jail tablets, phone calls, or video visits. Do not talk about witnesses, alleged evidence, firearms, drugs, money, vehicles, victim contact, co-defendants, social media posts, or anything that could violate a court order. Attorney communications and privileged professional communications follow separate procedures; family chat does not become privileged because the topic feels important.

Communication setup checklist:
  • Confirm the inmate’s name and docket number before funding any account.
  • Use SmartInmate for Smart Communications messaging and phone-credit setup.
  • Keep Smart Communications phone/message funds separate from ConnectNetwork deposits and iCare packages.
  • Save receipts and confirmation numbers.
  • Keep conversations neutral and non-case-related.

V. Smart Communications Mail, Legal Mail & Photos

Personal inmate mail for the Pinellas County Jail goes through Smart Communications. PCSO states that inmates may send and receive letters from outside the jail, but personal mail from family and friends must be sent to the Smart Communications processing address. Regular postal mail such as postcards, letters, and greeting cards is scanned into the Smart Communications system and made available to inmates through the inmate tablet or wall kiosk.

Personal inmate mail address:

Smart Communications-Pinellas County Jail
Attention To: Inmate Name and ID Number
P.O. Box 9204
Seminole, FL 33775-9129

PCSO warns that mail not containing the inmate ID number and name will be returned to sender. You should mail only copies of documents or pictures that you do not intend to get back. Families can sign up for a free MailGuardTracker account to track postal mail delivery status, receive rejection notices, and download copies of mail that has been processed.

Legal and privileged mail follows a different process. PCSO states legal or privileged mail from attorneys can be sent electronically through SmartInmate at no cost to the inmate or attorney. Attorneys need a government-issued ID and Bar Card for account approval. Attorney mail received at the jail is opened and scanned in direct view of the inmate, and PCSO states neither the Sheriff’s Office nor Smart Communications has access to viewing those correspondences.

Legal mail address:

LEGAL MAIL
Inmate Name and Docket #
14400 49th Street North
Clearwater, FL 33762

Mail mistake warning: Do not send original photos or documents you need returned. Personal mail is scanned. Missing inmate ID numbers, incomplete names, prohibited content, suspicious items, or improper legal-mail formatting can cause rejection or delay.

VI. Inmate Money, Commissary, Property & Fees

Pinellas County Jail accepts money orders for inmates, but the money order must contain the inmate’s full name, docket number, and housing assignment. PCSO states money orders are accepted Monday through Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., excluding holidays, at the Misdemeanor Probation Office and Public Lobby, or they can be mailed to Inmate Accounting at the jail.

Inmate Accounting mail address:

Pinellas County Jail
Inmate Accounting
14400 49th Street North
Clearwater, FL 33762

Kiosks that accept cash deposits are available at the Misdemeanor Probation Office and Public Lobby. Online deposits are accepted through ConnectNetwork, and customer service concerns for online deposits can be directed to 877-650-4249. Friends and family can also purchase commissary packages through the iCare program. These systems are not interchangeable: phone credits, commissary packages, money orders, online deposits, and bond payments are separate payment tracks.

Pinellas County also lists an inmate subsistence fee. Under Florida Statute 951.033, PCSO states non-federal inmates booked into the Pinellas County Jail are charged $20.00 to cover administrative costs, with stated exceptions. That fee is not the same as bond, commissary, or court costs. If an inmate account has money withheld or allocated unexpectedly, ask the jail or vendor which fee or obligation is involved.

Money checklist:
  • Use the inmate’s full name, docket number, and housing assignment when required.
  • Use ConnectNetwork for online deposits when appropriate.
  • Use SmartInmate for Smart Communications phone/message credits.
  • Use iCare for approved commissary packages.
  • Use GovPayNow, cash bond, or registered bonding agents for bond matters.
  • Never assume one payment system feeds another.

VII. Medical Care, Mental Health & Emergency Concerns

Medical or mental-health concerns inside a jail should be handled with precision, not panic and not vague messaging. If a family member has urgent health information, call the jail information line and explain the concern using exact facts: full name, docket number, diagnosis, medication name, dosage, prescribing doctor, pharmacy, allergies, recent hospitalization, pregnancy concerns, seizure history, insulin dependency, suicide risk, detox risk, or mobility limitation.

Do not arrive at the jail with medication and assume staff will accept it informally. Correctional medical procedures are controlled by jail policy, medical review, pharmacy verification, safety rules, and contraband controls. If medication information is important, ask what documentation is required and how medical staff should receive it.

Property issues should also be verified before travel. Personal property may be restricted by evidence status, release authorization, inmate permission, agency procedure, court order, or jail policy. Vehicle impound release is separate from jail property and may involve the arresting agency, towing company, registered owner, proof of insurance, valid license status, court order, or evidence hold.

Emergency warning: For immediate danger, active self-harm risk, overdose, severe withdrawal, serious medical emergency, or a crime in progress, call or text 911. Do not rely on routine mail, inmate messaging, or delayed family calls for urgent safety concerns.

VIII. Video Visitation Rules, Scheduling & Attorney Visits

Pinellas County Jail visitation is video-based. PCSO states there are no face-to-face visits except for professional or other visits specifically approved by jail command. The jail contracts with Smart Communications to provide kiosks and portable kiosks in housing units for external family/friend/professional communications and internal jail requests.

Family and friends can create a Smart Communications account and schedule remote video visits. Pre-scheduled visits are scheduled in 30-minute increments. PCSO states inmates are provided four 30-minute pre-scheduled remote or on-demand video visitation sessions per week, and additional sessions can be purchased at $0.16 per minute. Visitation may be scheduled up to seven days in advance and at least 24 hours in advance. Visitation hours are 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m., seven days a week.

Video on Demand is inmate initiated. Inmates can schedule a visitation session with family and friends who have already connected to the inmate through Smart Communications. Calls must be answered within a three-minute window on the receiving end. If you miss that window, do not assume the jail canceled the visit; the system timing itself may be the reason.

Attorney and professional visitation has separate rules. In-person professional visitation is available Monday through Friday between 6:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. Florida attorneys must provide a Florida driver license and valid Florida Bar card for facility admission. Out-of-state attorneys or attorneys seeking visitation outside regular business hours must obtain advance approval. Court-appointed professional visitors must submit assignment documentation and item lists in advance for approval.

Visitation warning: Personal visits are recorded and monitored. Only privileged professional sessions that follow approved procedures should be treated differently. Do not discuss criminal-case facts, witness strategy, victim contact, or evidence during ordinary family video visits.

IX. Pinellas Clerk Court Records & Case Follow-Up

The Pinellas County Jail search and the Pinellas Clerk court-record system answer different questions. The jail search answers custody questions: who is in jail, who was recently released, what docket number is listed, and what booking status appears. The Clerk record answers court questions: what case was filed, what hearings exist, what documents are available, what fees apply, and what the court docket shows.

The Pinellas Clerk provides Court Records View as an online service that allows the public to view many court case information records and documents. However, some records may be confidential, restricted, sealed, redacted, governed by family/juvenile/probate rules, or available only through a subscriber or formal request process. Do not assume a missing online document means the case does not exist.

For criminal or traffic matters, use the person’s name, case number, docket number, or available booking information to narrow the search. If you need certified copies, complete record searches, or official documents for court, employment, immigration, licensing, housing, or legal use, follow the Clerk’s official process. Screenshots from a jail search page are not certified court records.

Correct workflow: PCSO “Who’s In Jail” for custody. PCSO inmate information for jail rules. PCSO bond page for payment routes. Pinellas Clerk for court records. Attorney for legal strategy.

X. Legal Counsel & Visitor Precedents: Crucial Tips

⚠️ Do Not Mail Originals

Personal mail is scanned into Smart Communications. If you send original photos or documents, you should not expect them back.

💸 Separate Payment Systems

Bond, purge, money orders, ConnectNetwork deposits, iCare packages, and Smart Communications credits are separate systems. Mixing them up wastes time.

🎥 Build the SmartInmate Account Early

Visits require account setup and scheduling. Waiting until the last minute can create ID, password, approval, or payment problems.

📑 Docket Number First

The docket number is your control number for mail, bond, court follow-up, and records questions. Get it before calling multiple offices.

XI. Facility Jurisdiction Map

The Pinellas County Jail is located at 14400 49th Street North in Clearwater, Florida. Before traveling, confirm whether you need the jail, public lobby, Misdemeanor Probation Office, court, Clerk’s Office, professional visitation, or another county location. Pinellas government and court functions are spread across multiple addresses, so one wrong destination can cost time.

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