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How to Find an Inmate: Look Up If Someone Is in Jail

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Find out if someone is in jail or prison free. Step-by-step US inmate search using the federal BOP locator, state DOC tools, county jail rosters and VINELink.
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How Do You Find Out If Someone Is in Jail or Prison?

To find out if someone is in jail or prison in the US, search the correctional system that holds them: the federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) inmate locator for federal inmates, your state's Department of Corrections (DOC) inmate search for state prisoners, and the county sheriff's jail roster or VINELink for people in local jails. All three are free, public, and searchable by name. The catch is knowing which one to check โ€” so it helps to first confirm the person's full legal name and which state they're likely in.

Here's the quick version:

If you only have a name, a nickname, or an old email, start by confirming exactly who the person is and where they've lived. A free profile search on Lullar can surface their public footprint across 175+ sites, and a Spokeo public-records search can confirm a full legal name, age, and likely state before you ever open an inmate locator.

This guide is for locating a person you know โ€” an incarcerated relative or friend, or someone you've lost touch with. Inmate and people-search tools must never be used for employment, tenant, or credit screening, or any purpose governed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).

Search the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) Inmate Locator

The BOP Inmate Locator is the free, official tool for finding anyone held in a federal prison. It covers federal inmates incarcerated from 1982 to the present and is open to the public at no cost.

To use it:

  1. Go to the BOP Inmate Locator (bop.gov/inmateloc).
  2. Search by the inmate's BOP Register Number if you have it, or by first and last name.
  3. If searching by name, narrow the results with race, age, and gender to find the right person faster.

The results show the inmate's current facility (or that they've been released) and their release date or status. Two important limits: the locator only includes federal inmates โ€” not state prisoners or people in county jails โ€” and it may not reflect real-time changes like a recent transfer or release. If you don't find your person here, they're most likely in a state or county facility instead.

Not sure of the exact spelling of a full legal name, or whether they go by a middle name or maiden name? Confirm it first with a Spokeo people search, which pulls name variations and aliases from public records so your locator search returns the right match.

Confirm the Right Person Before You Search

Spokeo searches billions of US public records to confirm a person's full name, age, possible relatives, and known locations โ€” so you search the right name, in the right state, and reconnect with the person you're actually looking for.

Search on Spokeo →

Search Your State's Department of Corrections (DOC)

If the person is in a state prison, use that state's Department of Corrections (DOC) inmate search. Every US state โ€” plus the District of Columbia โ€” runs its own free online inmate locator, such as California's CIRIS (from the CDCR) or the Texas inmate search. The BOP locator won't find state prisoners, so this is the step most people actually need.

To search a state system:

  1. Identify the state the person is likely incarcerated in (usually where they were arrested or last lived).
  2. Search for that state's "Department of Corrections inmate locator" or "[state] inmate search."
  3. Enter the inmate's name or, if you have it, their state ID / offender number.

Each state tool is a little different, but most let you search by name and return the facility, custody status, and sometimes a projected release date. The hardest part is usually knowing which state to check. If you're not sure where someone ended up, a free Lullar profile search can surface recent public posts and locations, and a Spokeo public-records lookup can show address history and likely current state โ€” pointing you to the right DOC to search.

Government directories like USA.gov also link out to every state's prisoner-records page, so you can confirm you're on the official state site rather than a paid lookalike.

Don't just read โ€” try a search now

Check County Jails and VINELink

For someone who was recently arrested or is awaiting trial, check the county jail roster or use VINELink โ€” local jails, not state or federal prisons, hold most people in the days and weeks after an arrest.

Two free options:

One thing to expect: a newly booked person may not appear right away. It often takes 24โ€“72 hours (sometimes longer) for a new inmate to be entered into the system, and rosters don't always reflect real-time releases or transfers. If a name isn't showing up yet, wait a day and check again.

What You Need Before You Search (and How to Confirm It)

The single biggest reason an inmate search fails is searching the wrong name in the wrong system. Before you start, it helps to have three things: the person's full legal name (and any aliases or maiden names), their likely state, and ideally a register or offender number.

Common pitfalls to avoid:

To confirm the details before you search, start free with Lullar to map a person's public profiles by name, email, or username across 175+ sites โ€” useful for confirming identity and recent location. When you need to lock down a full legal name, age, possible relatives, and known states, a Spokeo public-records search pulls that together from billions of US records, so you walk into the BOP or state DOC locator already knowing exactly who and where to look for.

Use these tools only to locate or reconnect with a person โ€” never to screen someone for a job, housing, or credit.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find out if someone is in jail for free?

Use the free official locators. For federal inmates, search the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) Inmate Locator at bop.gov. For state prisoners, use that state's Department of Corrections inmate search. For someone recently arrested or in a local jail, check the county sheriff's jail roster or VINELink, which covers many county jails and state prisons in one search. All are free and searchable by name.

What's the difference between the federal BOP locator and a state inmate search?

The BOP Inmate Locator only covers federal inmates (incarcerated from 1982 to today). It will not show people held in state prisons or county jails. For state prisoners you must use that specific state's Department of Corrections inmate search, and every state plus DC has its own free tool. If the BOP search comes up empty, the person is most likely in a state or county facility.

Why can't I find someone in the inmate locator?

A few common reasons: the person was only recently booked (it can take 24โ€“72 hours, sometimes longer, to appear), you're searching the wrong system (federal vs. state vs. county), or the name is spelled or formatted differently than you expect (a nickname instead of a legal name, or a maiden name). Try name variations, an ID number, and the correct level of custody. Confirming the person's full legal name and likely state first โ€” for example with a Spokeo public-records search โ€” makes a match far more likely.

How do I find which prison or jail someone is in if I don't know the state?

Start by figuring out where the person was likely arrested or last lived, since that usually points to the right state Department of Corrections. A free Lullar profile search can surface recent public posts and locations by name, email, or username, and a Spokeo public-records lookup can show address history and likely current state. Once you know the state, search that state's DOC tool or use VINELink, which spans many jurisdictions at once.

Is it legal to look up whether someone is in jail or prison?

Yes. Inmate locators like the BOP, state DOC tools, and VINELink publish public records, and anyone can search them for free. It is legal to use this information to locate or reconnect with a person, such as an incarcerated relative or friend. However, you must not use inmate or people-search results to screen someone for employment, housing, or credit โ€” those purposes are governed by the Fair Credit Reporting Act and require an FCRA-compliant service.

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