Shasta County Jail Inmate Search, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026

Shasta County Jail Inmate Search, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026
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Shasta County Jail Inmate Search: Custody Lookup, Bail, Mail & Visiting 2026

This guide explains how to use the official Shasta County Jail inmate search, confirm custody in Redding, review bail and bond rules, send mail correctly, fund commissary through Access Corrections, use IC Solutions phone options, verify visitation status, and cross-check Shasta County Superior Court records.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Pursuant to California public record practices and local correctional protocols, this page is provided for informational guidance only. A jail custody listing, arrest entry, mugshot, booking number, bail amount, or charge label is not a conviction. All arrestees and detainees are presumed innocent unless adjudicated guilty in a court of competent jurisdiction. Always verify custody, bail, court dates, release eligibility, visitation status, mail rules, communication options, and commissary instructions directly with the Shasta County Sheriff’s Office, Shasta County Jail, Shasta County Superior Court, or qualified legal counsel.

The Shasta County Jail is the main county detention facility for Shasta County, California. It is located in Redding and is operated by the Shasta County Sheriff’s Office. People searching for “Shasta County jail inmate search” are usually not looking for only one fact. They need to know whether someone is currently in custody, what facility address to use, whether bail can be posted, how to contact the inmate, how to send mail, whether a visit is possible, and how to confirm the court case.

The official Shasta County Sheriff’s Office site should be the first source, not a random mugshot scraper, bail-ad page, or copied jail directory. The official jail page links to the Shasta County inmate lookup, CDCR inmate locator, visitation request page, inmate visiting schedule, commissary deposit systems, IC Solutions communication information, and VINE victim-notification resources. Use those official paths before making a payment, sending a package, driving to the jail, or assuming a person has been released.

The hard truth: a custody listing is not the same as a court record. The jail record helps answer “Is this person in custody at Shasta County Jail?” The court record answers “What has the court filed, ordered, scheduled, or resolved?” A charge shown in booking may later be changed, dismissed, reduced, enhanced, or replaced by a formal court filing. Serious decisions should always be verified through both the jail and Shasta County Superior Court.

📍 Jail Address

Facility:
Shasta County Jail

Physical / Mailing Reference:
1655 West Street
Redding, CA 96001

Use this for: jail location, bail reception, inmate mail address formatting, commissary kiosk location, visitation lobby reference, and facility map directions.

📞 Department Contacts

Jail Phone:
(530) 245-6100

To Speak to a Deputy:
(530) 245-6540

General Sheriff Questions:
(530) 245-6000

Fax:
(530) 245-6054

🏢 Sheriff’s Office

Agency:
Shasta County Sheriff’s Office

Administrative Address:
300 Park Marina Circle
Redding, CA 96001

Important distinction: The Sheriff’s administrative office is not the same as the jail reception area for bail, visitation, custody questions, or commissary kiosk use.

💰 Money & Calls

Commissary Vendor:
Access Corrections / Keefe Money System

Deposit Phone:
1-866-345-1884

Phone Vendor:
IC Solutions

Calling Assistance:
888-506-8407

II. Booking, Custody Status, Mugshots & Record Timing

After an arrest in Shasta County, the person may be transported to the Shasta County Jail for booking. Booking can involve identity verification, arrest-report review, fingerprinting, property inventory, medical screening, classification, housing assignment, bail review, and data entry. These steps are bureaucratic but important. They explain why a family member may know the person was arrested but still cannot immediately find a clean online result.

A custody record can change quickly. The inmate may be in intake, moved to housing, released on bail, released on citation, transported to court, held on another agency’s warrant, moved to state custody, or temporarily unavailable because of medical or classification issues. A third-party jail listing may lag behind, and screenshots can become obsolete within hours. Use the official Sheriff page and call the jail when timing matters.

For people who are trying to determine whether the person is in county jail or state prison, use the correct system. Shasta County Jail handles county detention. CDCR handles California state prison inmates. If the person was recently arrested, start with Shasta County Jail. If the person was sentenced to state prison or transferred after a felony case, use the CDCR inmate locator. Searching the wrong system creates false negatives.

Record-timing warning: A public custody page is a snapshot, not a guarantee of current physical location. Always verify before posting bail, sending mail, setting up calls, scheduling a visit, or driving to the jail.

III. Bail Bonds & Pre-Trial Release Procedures

Shasta County’s official jail page provides specific bail guidance. To bail a person out using U.S. currency, you must have the exact dollar amount. The official instructions also state that a verifiable personal check up to $1,000 may be used, or a cashier’s check or money order can be obtained for the exact amount. Checks, cashier’s checks, or money orders should be made payable to Shasta County Superior Court and brought to the reception area of the Main Jail Facility at 1655 West Street in Redding.

To bond a person out through a bail bond agency, you select the bail bond agency of your choice. Jail staff do not choose the bondsman for you. The bondsman will explain the private bond process, fees, collateral, co-signer requirements, and release expectations. Before you call a bondsman, obtain the charge and bail amount from custody staff. The official jail page directs users to call (530) 245-6100 and follow the instructions to speak with custody staff for bail or bond information.

Before paying bail or signing with a bondsman, verify:
  • The inmate’s full legal name and current custody status.
  • The exact charge list and bail amount from custody staff.
  • Whether the bond is cash, surety, court-only, no-bail, or subject to judicial review.
  • Whether there are multiple cases, warrants, probation holds, parole issues, out-of-county holds, or protective-order restrictions.
  • Whether payment must be made at the jail reception area or through another court-controlled process.
  • Whether release conditions include no contact, GPS monitoring, weapon restrictions, substance restrictions, or stay-away orders.

Posting bail does not guarantee immediate release. The jail may still need to verify payment, complete paperwork, check warrants, clear holds, process property, move the inmate from housing, complete medical or classification review, and wait for staff workflow. Families should expect delays after payment. The dangerous assumption is that a paid bond means the inmate walks out in minutes. In reality, release can take hours, especially during high-volume booking periods, court transport windows, shift changes, weekends, or cases with multiple holds.

Bail scam warning: Never send money to a caller claiming a person will be released if you pay through a QR code, gift card, cash app, cryptocurrency, or unofficial link. Verify bail directly through the jail or court before paying anyone.

IV. Phone Calls, IC Solutions & Inmate Messaging

Inmates at Shasta County Jail generally cannot receive normal incoming personal phone calls. Communication usually begins when the inmate uses the approved telephone system. Shasta County’s jail page directs friends and family needing calling assistance to IC Solutions at 888-506-8407 or the IC Solutions website. The official communication information describes prepaid accounts, debit telephone accounts, and inmate messaging options.

A prepaid account allows someone outside the jail to purchase phone services for a specific number. A debit telephone account allows funding for the inmate’s account so the inmate can call numbers that are not blocked. The IC Solutions communication sheet also identifies an inmate messaging option where friends or family can leave a message by phone, with the resident ID required. Because communication systems can change, use the official Sheriff’s page first and do not rely on a sponsored vendor result.

Account setup requires accuracy. You may need the facility name, resident name, resident ID number, your name and address, and the phone number connected to the account. If calls are failing, check whether the number is blocked, whether the account is funded in the right category, whether the inmate has completed intake, whether the inmate has created a PIN, and whether the inmate is under housing, disciplinary, medical, or classification restrictions.

All non-privileged inmate communications should be treated as monitored, recorded, stored, and potentially reviewable. Do not discuss alleged facts of the case, witnesses, victim contact, co-defendants, weapons, drugs, vehicles, money transfers, social media, protective orders, hidden property, or anything that could create legal exposure. Attorney communications are different, but legal communication should be arranged through counsel and proper facility procedures.

Recorded-call warning: A jail phone call is not a private family conversation. One careless sentence can damage bail, plea negotiations, witness issues, or trial strategy.

V. Strict Mail Regulations, Commissary, Books & Care Packages

Shasta County’s official jail page provides a simple mail format: include the inmate’s last name and first name; inmate number and housing are not necessary; and address mail c/o Shasta County Jail, 1655 West Street, Redding, CA 96001. Even with a simple address rule, senders must understand that jail mail is screened for contraband, threats, coded communication, drug contamination, unauthorized contact, gang material, and other security risks.

Basic inmate mail format:

Inmate Last Name, First Name
c/o Shasta County Jail
1655 West Street
Redding, CA 96001

Important: Always include your full return name and return address. Confirm current rules before sending legal documents, books, photos, or anything beyond a plain letter.

Do not send cash, checks, money orders, stamps, stickers, glitter, perfume, lipstick, marker, crayon, tape, laminated material, unknown substances, medication, SIM cards, USB devices, loose photographs, blank paper, extra envelopes, or content that violates a court order. If an item is rejected, it may be returned, destroyed, held, or treated as contraband depending on the rule and circumstances. The reception deputy will not accept packages, books, mail, or commissary money at visitation.

Commissary is handled separately from personal mail. Shasta County’s jail page states that inmates place commissary orders every Sunday and may purchase a maximum of $100 worth of commissary goods per week. Funds must be deposited in the inmate’s account before 8:00 a.m. on Monday. Money can be placed through the Access Secured Deposit kiosk in the jail lobby at 1655 West Street, online through Access Corrections, or by toll-free phone at 1-866-345-1884. Deposits by mail are no longer accepted.

Books and care packages require special caution. The official jail page says no packages, books, or mail will be accepted by the reception deputy. That means families should not show up in person with books, clothing, hygiene items, food, or random supplies. If packages or books are allowed through an approved vendor or catalog, use only the officially linked package-ordering process and confirm current limits first. Unauthorized packages are a classic rejection and contraband-risk area.

Commissary deadline warning: If funds are not on the inmate’s account before the facility’s weekly cutoff, the inmate may miss that commissary cycle. Do not wait until Monday morning and assume the deposit will process instantly.

VI. Medical Care, Prescriptions & Property Release

Medical care inside the Shasta County Jail is handled through correctional medical procedures. Families should not arrive with prescription medication expecting staff to accept it automatically. Medication must be verified, reviewed, approved, and controlled according to jail policy. If the medical issue is urgent, call the jail and provide precise information: the inmate’s full legal name, date of birth if known, diagnosis, medication name, dosage, prescribing doctor, pharmacy, allergies, recent hospitalization, mental-health risks, seizure history, insulin dependence, pregnancy concerns, detox risk, or mobility limitations.

Do not exaggerate medical information, but do not minimize it either. Correctional staff need facts, not panic. Serious risks such as suicide concerns, withdrawal, psychosis, seizure disorder, insulin needs, heart medication, psychiatric medication, pregnancy complications, or recent surgery should be communicated clearly and promptly. If there is immediate life-threatening danger, use emergency procedures rather than waiting for a routine message.

Property release is a separate process from medical care, bail, and commissary. During booking, personal property is inventoried. Some property may be eligible for release only with inmate authorization. Other property may be held as evidence, restricted by policy, tied to another agency, or unavailable until the inmate is released. Family members should bring government-issued identification and call before traveling to the jail to ask whether the item can be released, what documentation is required, and whether an appointment or authorization is needed.

Vehicle impound release is also separate. If a vehicle was towed during the arrest, the jail may not control it. The arresting agency, towing company, registered owner, proof of insurance, driver-license status, lienholder, law-enforcement hold, or court order may decide whether the vehicle can be released. Ask which agency ordered the tow and whether the vehicle is evidence before paying a tow yard.

VII. Visitation Rules, Request Form & Construction Notice

Shasta County visitation requires advance planning. The official visitation request page states that requests must be received seven days prior to the requested visitation date and that requests greater than 30 days in advance are not accepted due to volume. Visitors should check the visitation schedule for the correct visitation days according to the inmate’s housing unit before submitting a request. Once received, the request is reviewed, and the visitor is notified by email if the request is approved and what time slot has been assigned.

The jail page lists general visiting hours as 7:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m., seven days per week, with an additional 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekend window. Each inmate can have up to two scheduled visits. Visits are two times weekly, one per visiting day, and each visit is 30 minutes. Visitors must be 18 or accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Visitors must have verifiable identification, such as a California driver license.

However, there is a major caution. The official Shasta County Jail page recently carried a notice stating that effective Friday, September 26, 2025, all in-person visitation for inmates housed in the Shasta County Jail would be temporarily suspended due to an elevator replacement construction project, with free video visitation arranged through the tablet vendor. Because this notice was tied to construction and the stated estimate was approximately four months, users should verify the current in-person visitation status directly before driving to the jail. Do not assume the online schedule alone means in-person visits are currently operating exactly as normal.

Visitor rules to verify before travel:
  • Whether in-person visitation is currently open or still affected by facility construction.
  • Whether the visitation request was submitted at least seven days in advance.
  • Whether the request was submitted no more than 30 days in advance.
  • Whether the assigned housing unit matches the correct visiting schedule.
  • Whether the visitor received email approval and a 30-minute time slot.
  • Whether the visitor has valid identification and arrives on time.

The posted rules state that no purses, packages, or carry-in items are allowed inside the jail. No smoking is allowed inside the jail. No packages, books, or mail will be accepted by the reception deputy. Commissary money will not be accepted by the reception deputy. A maximum of one adult and one minor is allowed per inmate visit. Anyone visiting the jail is subject to search of their person or property and must pass through a metal detector before entering the secure visiting area. No photographic equipment or cellphones are permitted inside the jail. Visitors who are late for their appointment will not be processed into the facility.

Visitation warning: Showing up with a phone, purse, package, book, cash, or no approved appointment is the fastest way to lose the visit. The rules are not flexible because the facility is a secure detention environment.

VIII. Shasta County Court Records, Warrants & Case Follow-Up

After using the Shasta County jail inmate search, verify the criminal case through Shasta County Superior Court. The Superior Court’s online case-record page explains that information obtained from the site does not constitute the official record of the court. It also notes that remote display of certain case categories is restricted pursuant to California Rules of Court 2.503. In plain English, the online portal is useful, but it is not always the complete or official final record.

The Criminal Division of Shasta County Superior Court has jurisdiction over infractions, misdemeanors, and felony cases. It handles complaints filed by prosecuting agencies, including the Shasta County District Attorney and other prosecuting authorities. Clerks are prohibited from giving legal advice. Users can search the case index online or submit a written request for a criminal background search, but serious legal decisions should be made with attorney guidance.

Separate the jail record from the court docket. The jail may show a charge label from booking. The court may later show arraignment, complaint filing, amended complaint, bail order, protective order, preliminary hearing, plea, dismissal, conviction, sentence, warrant, failure-to-appear issue, or post-disposition order. If an online case cannot be found, it may not yet be filed, may be restricted from remote display, may be in another court, may be under a different name spelling, or may require clerk assistance.

If you suspect a bench warrant has been issued, the safer path is to contact Shasta County Superior Court and ask what steps are required to address the matter. Do not treat an online absence as proof that no warrant exists. Warrants, holds, and court orders can affect bail, release, visitation, and future custody status.

IX. Legal Counsel & Visitor Precedents: Crucial Tips

⚠️ Security Delays

Leave phones, purses, bags, tools, pocketknives, vape devices, medication bottles, pepper spray, and suspicious objects outside the secure process. Visitors are subject to search and metal-detector screening.

💸 Bail Processing

Before paying bail or calling a bondsman, obtain the exact charge and bail amount from custody staff. One visible bail amount does not guarantee release if another hold or warrant exists.

👔 Visit Approval

Submit the visitation form seven days ahead, wait for approval, and verify current construction/video status. A schedule without an approved appointment is not enough.

📦 Commissary & Packages

Do not bring books, mail, packages, or money to the reception deputy. Use Access Corrections for commissary funds and verify package rules before ordering anything.

X. Facility Jurisdiction Map

The Shasta County Jail is located at 1655 West Street in Redding, California. The area is near downtown government and court operations, so visitors should confirm whether they need the jail, Sheriff’s administrative office, courthouse, or another county office before driving. For bail, visitation, commissary kiosk, and jail-custody questions, verify the correct entrance and procedure with the facility.