Putting Money on an Inmate's Account at Coweta County Jail: Mail, On‑Site ATM, and Online
Want to put money on an inmate's commissary account at Coweta County Jail? You've got three options: mail a money order, use the on-site ATM in the Sheriff's Office bonding area (accepts cash, credit, or debit), or deposit online through jailatm.com.
Coweta County Detention Center accepts three deposit methods: mail a money order (staff will credit the account), use the on-site ATM in the Sheriff's Office bonding area with cash or card, or go online through jailatm.com.
Mailing a money order? Fill it out carefully so it gets credited to the right person. Make it payable to "Coweta County Detention Center" and write the inmate's full name and ID number on the memo line.
- ✓ Put your name and address on the money order.
- ✓ Sign the money order and make sure it’s filled out completely.
- ✓ Don’t mail personal checks.
- ✓ Don’t mail cash.
Prefer to deposit in person? Head to the Sheriff's Office bonding area, where there's an ATM dedicated to inmate account deposits. It takes cash, credit, and debit.
Limit: No more than $100 will be accepted in any one deposit.
For online deposits, use jailatm.com - it's the jail's approved service for adding money to inmate accounts.
Expect transaction fees. Money order and cash deposits carry a $2.50 fee per transaction.
Credit or debit card deposits have a steeper fee: 10% of the amount you're adding.
Limit reminder: No more than $100 will be accepted in any one deposit.
Timing matters. Funds need to hit the account by 11:00 pm on Sunday to be available for that week's commissary. Miss the cutoff and the money won't be usable until the following week.
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