IG InmateGuide

New Mexico · NMCD

New Mexico Sending Money to an Inmate

A practical, plain-English walk-through of how money works inside the New Mexico Corrections Department — including the contracted vendor, the rules that get visitors and senders denied, and how the policy compares with neighboring states.

The fastest way to put money on the books of an inmate in the New Mexico Corrections Department is through the contracted vendor, Access Corrections. Funds sent online or through the vendor's mobile app generally post to the inmate's NMCD account within twenty-four hours. Vendor fees scale with the deposit amount — typically two to twelve dollars per transaction — and most vendors cap a single transfer at $300 with a daily cap of $300–$500 across all senders. Phone deposits cost slightly more than online deposits; walk-in kiosk deposits at the facility lobby are usually the cheapest option after lockbox.

If you do not want to pay vendor fees, mail a U.S. Postal money order or a cashier's check directly to the facility's lockbox address. Make the instrument payable to the inmate's full committed name and write the NMCD ID number on the memo line. Personal checks and cash are never accepted by mail and are typically destroyed at the mail room — there is no return-to-sender process for cash. Lockbox deposits clear the inmate's account in five to ten business days; build that delay into your planning if you are sending commissary money before a holiday.

Related: trusted reentry directory.

Once funds post, the inmate can spend at the weekly commissary store on food, hygiene supplies, stationery, over-the-counter medications, and tablet content. NMCD also automatically deducts a portion of every deposit to satisfy court-ordered restitution, child support, room-and-board, and victim-compensation obligations. The deduction percentage varies but is usually fifteen to fifty percent of every dollar received until the obligation is paid in full. Spending caps for New Mexico state inmates generally run $200–$400 per month; county jails frequently cap weekly purchases at $50 to $100.

Related: family support resources.

Watch for scams. Inmates do not legitimately receive money sent to a personal phone number, a CashApp tag, a gift-card code, or a personal bank account that someone “inside” has provided. These schemes are almost always run by people outside the facility using contraband phones, and the funds never reach the inmate. Send money only through the vendor on the NMCD official website or through the lockbox address printed on the institution's contact page. If you spot a suspected scam, report the phone number to ICSolutions and to the NMCD Office of Investigations.

Related: prison consulting services.

Related on InmateGuide: For facility-specific rules, see Camino Nuevo Correctional Center, Central New Mexico Correctional Facility, Cibola County Correctional Center, or browse all New Mexico facilities. Compare with New Mexico Visiting Rules and Hours, New Mexico Mail and Photos, New Mexico Phone Calls and Messaging. For an interstate overview, read our general sending money to an inmate guide.