How to Add Money to an Inmate's Account (NCIC portal)
If your loved one's facility uses NCIC, you can add money online through the NCIC customer portal. Follow the steps below to log in and complete an Add Funds payment.
How to deposit funds, commissary, and payment options
Conway County Detention Center points families and visitors to two online options for adding money: the NCIC add-funds portal and a vendor payment page from First Arkansas Bail Bonds. With NCIC, you create an account, log in, and add funds using a credit or debit card. The add-funds interface lets you browse by state and even country when selecting a facility. First Arkansas Bail Bonds offers a "Make A Payment" form that collects defendant and payment details, accepts all major credit cards, and includes a PayPal payment link. Their payment page lists a 3% processing fee. Before you start, have the inmate's state, facility name, and inmate ID or full name ready, then follow the portal instructions.
Search for a loved one and send messages and photos in minutes.
If your loved one's facility uses NCIC, you can add money online through the NCIC customer portal. Follow the steps below to log in and complete an Add Funds payment.
Adding money through NCIC is straightforward once you know where to go. First, confirm that Conway County Detention Center actually accepts NCIC deposits.
You can add funds online through the NCIC add-funds portal by creating an account and paying with a credit or debit card. Another option: use the First Arkansas Bail Bonds "Make A Payment" form and enter the inmate or defendant details it requests. Have the inmate's state, facility name, and inmate ID or full name ready before you start.
The listed vendor payment page from First Arkansas Bail Bonds shows a 3% processing fee on payments.
NCIC advertises credit and debit card payments through its app and portal. First Arkansas Bail Bonds accepts all major credit cards and also provides a PayPal payment link on its payments page.
Reaching someone at Conway County Detention Center typically means using mail, phone, or electronic messaging, but the rules can change. Follow the steps below to confirm what's currently allowed and avoid rejected mail, blocked calls, or setup delays.
Sending money to someone in jail is straightforward once you confirm which payment system the facility uses. Here's how to handle Conway County Detention Center the right way, without sending funds to the wrong place.
Visiting someone at Conway County Detention Center is straightforward once you know the rules. We don't have verified, facility-specific details here yet (hours, scheduling, allowed items), so call the jail or check Conway County's official sources before making the trip.