Sending Money

How to Send Money to Lee County Jail, TX (TX)

If you're trying to get commissary money to someone at Lee County Jail, timing matters. You need to send it the right way and early enough to make the weekly cutoff.

2 min read Based on general AL policies
How to Send Money to Lee County Jail, TX (TX)

Lee County Jail runs commissary on a weekly schedule. For a money order to count toward that week's delivery, it must arrive before 10:00 a.m. on Monday. Miss that cutoff, and the funds likely won't make the Thursday commissary delivery that same week.

When mailing a money order for commissary, make it out to the inmate. Address the envelope to the inmate as well so staff can easily identify who the funds belong to during processing.

Note: This guide does not include a verified mailing address, accepted money order brands, fees, or electronic payment options. Before sending funds, confirm the current address and payment rules directly with the jail to avoid delays or rejection.

How to Send Money to Lee County Jail, TX (TX)

Steps to Follow

  • Make the money order out to the inmate.
  • Address the envelope to the inmate.
  • Get the money order there before 10:00 a.m. on Monday if you want it included in that week’s Thursday commissary delivery.

Tip: Before mailing anything, call the jail to confirm a few things: whether they accept mail only or also allow in-person drop-off, what payment types are accepted besides money orders (if any), and whether you need to include an inmate ID number along with the inmate's name.

When you call the jail, focus on the details that cause the most problems. Ask for the correct mailing address for commissary money orders, and confirm whether the Monday 10:00 a.m. receipt cutoff and Thursday delivery schedule are still current. Find out exactly how the payee line should be written, how to include the inmate's name (plus any required inmate identifier), whether there are fees, and how long processing usually takes once the money order arrives.

  1. Contact the jail - Use the official phone number or website so you’re working from the most current rules.
  2. Confirm where and how to send the money order - Verify the correct mailing address and any envelope labeling requirements.
  3. Verify payee formatting and identifiers - Ask exactly what the money order should say and whether an inmate ID number is required.
  4. Ask about timing and costs - Confirm the Monday 10:00 a.m. cutoff for Thursday commissary delivery, plus any fees or processing delays.

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