Wakulla Corrections Inst, FL

Physical Address
110 Melaleuca DrCrawfordville, FL, 32327

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Guides for This Facility

At a Glance

Communication

  • All inmate calls from Wakulla Corrections Institute are Collect, Prepaid Collect, or Debit.
  • Wakulla staff do not take or deliver routine messages and will only relay messages in family emergencies such as a critical hospital condition or death.
  • To receive calls from an incarcerated person you often need to set up and fund a vendor prepaid account because calls are typically outgoing-only through vendor systems.

Mail & Letters

  • Wakulla County Jail encourages inmates to correspond with family and friends and links an attachment with the facility's mail procedures.
  • Always include the inmate's full name and booking/ID number and your full return address on the envelope.
  • Do not send original vital documents; send copies instead and provide return instructions if you need originals back.

Sending Money

  • Deposits can be made at the Sheriff's Office lobby kiosk or online at commissarydeposit.com.
  • CommissaryDeposit accepts credit or debit card payments through its payment portal.
  • The facility does not accept cash, money orders, or personal checks for inmate deposits.

Contact Info

  • Wakulla Corrections Inst (Wakulla County Sheriff's Office) is located at 15 Oak St, Crawfordville, FL 32327.
  • For urgent threats to life, escapes, or other immediate public‑safety incidents, contact local emergency services and follow state correctional reporting channels.
  • Routine booking and detainee‑status questions are typically handled through the facility front desk or non‑emergency booking line.

Based on official sources and community feedback. Learn how we verify

Topic Overviews

Communication

Incarcerated people at Wakulla Corrections Institute can only place outgoing calls using Collect, Prepaid Collect, or Debit options. How you receive those calls depends on which method you set up. You'll likely need to create and fund a prepaid account through the phone service provider. Staff won't pass along routine personal messages—they only relay information about family emergencies like a critical hospital condition or death. Beyond phone calls, many Florida facilities offer e-messaging, tablet messaging, or remote video visits through third-party vendors, though availability and costs vary by location.

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Mail & Letters

Wakulla County Jail encourages inmates to correspond with family and friends. The inmate mail page includes a linked attachment labeled "procedures for sending mail to inates"—read it before mailing anything to follow the facility's exact process and avoid delays or rejections. Address every envelope with the inmate's full name and booking/ID number, plus your complete return name and address. Don't send original vital documents like birth certificates or Social Security cards; send copies instead. If you expect anything returned, include clear instructions or a prepaid return envelope. Mail handling varies by facility (some use scanning or third-party digital systems), so treat the Wakulla procedures attachment as your final reference.

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Sending Money

Wakulla Corrections Institute accepts inmate deposits through its Inmate Deposit System—either at the kiosk in the Sheriff's Office lobby or online at commissarydeposit.com. The online portal accepts credit and debit cards. You'll need the inmate's state, facility, and their inmate ID or name to complete the deposit. Cash, money orders, and personal checks aren't accepted. The only exception is a check issued by another detention facility or law enforcement agency. Keep in mind that deposited funds can be subject to collections for debts the inmate owes. Booking and daily sustenance fees may be charged and deducted from deposits, and unpaid balances can be forwarded to billing.

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Contact

Wakulla Corrections Inst (listed under the Wakulla County Sheriff's Office) is at 15 Oak St, Crawfordville, FL 32327. Use this address for mail or in-person visits. For routine questions—like whether someone is booked, current detainee status, or basic jail information—start with the facility front desk or the non-emergency booking line on the agency's official page. For records, court-related information, or formal requests, follow the records instructions provided (often through written forms, email, fax, or an online portal). Having issues with phone service, commissary, or payments? Contact the third-party vendor's customer service listed on the facility page, not the jail directly.

Common Questions

Showing 6 of 12
Q

What types of phone calls are allowed from inmates at Wakulla Corrections Institute?

All inmate calls from Wakulla Corrections Institute are Collect, Prepaid Collect, or Debit.

Communication
Q

Will Wakulla Corrections Institute deliver a personal message to my loved one?

No. Wakulla does not take or deliver routine messages; staff will only relay messages for family emergencies such as a critical hospital condition or death.

Communication
Q

How can I receive calls or use other communication options with an inmate at Wakulla?

Wakulla's published information covers call types and emergency-message limits. For phone calls, you'll likely need to set up and fund a vendor prepaid account since calls are outgoing-only. Many Florida facilities also use third-party vendors for email/tablet messaging and remote video visits, but features and payment methods vary—check the facility's official information and the relevant vendor portal to confirm what's available.

Communication
Q

Where can I find Wakulla County Jail's mail procedures?

The inmate mail page links an attached PDF titled "procedures for sending mail to inates." Open that attachment and follow its instructions before sending mail.

Mail & Letters
Q

What should I put on the envelope when sending mail to someone at Wakulla County Jail?

Put the inmate’s full name and booking/ID number on the front of the envelope. Add your full return name and address so the jail can return the mail if something is missing.

Mail & Letters
Q

Can I send original documents (like a birth certificate) to an inmate at Wakulla County Jail?

Don’t mail original vital documents; send copies instead since originals may not be returned. If you need something returned, follow the procedures attachment and include return instructions or a prepaid return envelope.

Mail & Letters

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Did You Know?

**Wakulla Corrections Inst, FL:** Here's how to stay connected with someone at this facility. The jail encourages inmates to correspond with family and friends — check the attachment below for mail guidelines.

This guide is based on feedback from dozens of families and official facility documentation. Learn how we verify