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The mail room processes more than 127 tons of mail annually. Each piece of inmate mail must be opened and checked for contraband items.
In the interests of safety and security, we open and check all mail.
To address mail to an Orange County inmate, please include full Name, Booking Number, and Cell as shown in the Current Inmate Database. Please include you return address. Here's an example of a properly composed inmate address: John Joseph Jones 00012345 M-4A P.O. Box 4970 Orlando, FL 32802-4970
Please include your return address. Your first and last name is required, as is your street address, city, state and zip code. Do not send checks or cash. Instead, send money orders. On the money order, include inmate's Name and Booking number. Do not send stamps, envelopes, paper, pens, pencils, inappropriate pictures or photos (no Polaroid's accepted), plastic cards, phone cards, stickers, lipstick marks on envelopes or letters, padded or bubble mailers or glued items.
Books (paperback only - no hard covers), magazines, newspapers and religious materials must be mailed directly by the publisher or a bookstore. The mail parcel must contain an invoice with a company logo or a company packing slip with business name and contact information. Publications cannot contain any nudity or sexually oriented material.
All correspondence addressed to inmates must be sent by the United States Postal Service (USPS). Correspondence sent by other courier or delivery service will be refused.
Orange County Corrections Mail Room P.O. Box 4970 Orlando, FL 32802-4970 Phone: 407-836-3525 Email: mailroom@ocfl.net
In person: Orange County Corrections 3723 Vision Blvd. 4th Floor Orlando, FL. 32839 Note: U.S. mail is not received at street address shown above. To contact us via the U.S. Postal Service, mail your letter to: Orange County Corrections Department P.O. Box 4970 Orlando, Fl 32802-4970
All e-mail sent to this address becomes part of Orange County public record. Comments received by our e-mail subsystem can be read by anyone who requests that privilege. In compliance with "Government in the Sunshine" laws, Orange County Government must make available, at request, any and all information not deemed a threat to the security of law enforcement agencies and personnel.