Plymouth County Correctional Facility Overview
Plymouth County Correctional Facility, often called PCCF, is operated by the Plymouth County Sheriff's Department. It is the county's local jail and house of correction at 26 Long Pond Road in Plymouth. The sheriff's About page says the facility opened in 1994 and holds a diverse male population of county, state, and federal inmates. The PCCF page describes the facility as a secure setting for people being held or sentenced for crimes and as a place where reintegration programs are part of the mission.
PCCF also has an immigration custody role. The sheriff's ICE/DHS page says ICE detainees at PCCF are adult men housed in their own housing unit with sight-and-sound separation from inmates awaiting trial or serving criminal sentences. That matters for lookup. A county criminal detainee, a sentenced county inmate, a federal pretrial detainee, and an ICE detainee can all require different search routes even when the facility name is the same.
The facility overview image below is from the official PCCF page, which links facility, mission, accreditation, and ICE locator information.

The official PCCF page is a facility information source, not a public inmate roster.
PCCF Capacity and Population
The Massachusetts Sheriffs' Association says PCCF was designed to hold more than 1,200 inmates and describes it as the largest correctional facility under one roof in New England. The State Auditor's overview of the Plymouth County Sheriff's Department healthcare and inmate-death audit reported 582 inmates as of June 30, 2021, including 204 pretrial detainees. Those figures are dated and should not be used as a live headcount.
The 2021 audited count was below the design-capacity figure, but the research did not locate a current official PCCF average daily population. Use date labels when comparing these numbers.
Look Up PCCF Inmates
No official public PCCF roster was located on the Massachusetts sheriff site in the research materials. For a same-day Plymouth County Correctional Facility inmate lookup, call the jail at 508-830-6200. For a housing-location question tied to a visit, the official visits page says to call the same number and ask for Visits. For a written record, send a targeted request to the sheriff's Records Access Officer.
- Start with PCCF at 508-830-6200 if the person may be in local county custody.
- Ask whether the person is a county inmate, ICE detainee, state/federal hold, or no longer housed there.
- Use the sheriff public-records page for booking records, release records, or a booking photograph.
- Use MassCourts for court charges, bail orders, and court dates.
- Use ICE ODLS if the person is in immigration custody and BOP for federal sentenced custody.
Important: Plymouth County, Iowa roster pages are not Massachusetts PCCF records. Use PCSDMA, Mass.gov, VINE, ICE, BOP, or the court.
PCCF Address and Contact
The sheriff's contact list gives PCCF's address, phone, and fax. The sheriff's administrative building is nearby at 24 Long Pond Road, and the public-records page names Jessica Kenny as General Counsel and Records Access Officer for sheriff records.
Plymouth County Correctional Facility
26 Long Pond Road
Plymouth, MA 02360
508-830-6200
Fax: 508-830-6201
Sheriff Records Access Officer
Jessica Kenny, General Counsel
24 Long Pond Road
Plymouth, MA 02360
jkenny@pcsdma.org
Visiting at PCCF
PCCF visits require preapproval. The official visitor information says all visitors must complete a Visitor Pre-Approval Form or Request to Visit Questionnaire, be approved annually, be on the inmate's five-person preapproval list, and bring positive photographic identification. Visit processing starts before the visit period and ends before the last seating. Call PCCF before travel because current visiting hours may change.
| Visit Rule | PCCF Detail |
|---|---|
| Preapproval | Required for all visitors. |
| Inmate list | Visitor booklet says visitors must be on the inmate's five-person list. |
| ID | Positive photo identification is required. |
| Visit limits | Booklet snippet says one visit per day and two visits per week. |
| ICE visits | ICE detainees use last-name schedules and separate ICE rules. |
For ICE detainees, the sheriff's ICE/DHS page lists separate last-name visiting schedules and says attorneys have 24-hour in-person access to ICE clients.
PCCF Mail and Money
Effective June 1, 2024, personal mail is no longer accepted directly at PCCF in the traditional format. Personal mail goes to the Securus Digital Mail Center, is scanned and printed, then delivered. Legal or privileged mail still goes to PCCF at 26 Long Pond Road and must include the inmate's full name, ID number, unit number, room number, and LEGAL MAIL or PRIVILEGED MAIL. Publications must come from a publisher, distributor, or authorized retailer.
| Service | Official Detail |
|---|---|
| Online deposits | Access Corrections. |
| Phone deposits | (866) 345-1884. |
| Lobby kiosk | 26 Long Pond Road, 7:00 AM to 10:00 PM, seven days a week. |
| Money orders | Payable to the inmate and PCCF, with sender name and address. |
| Cash | Accepted but not recommended. |
Booking and Intake at PCCF
A local arrest may start at a police department, move to arraignment, and then lead to PCCF if the person is held after bail or sentenced to county custody. PCCF intake includes identity confirmation, commitment authority, property handling, health and security screening, classification, and housing assignment. The sheriff's ICE/DHS page gives extra operational detail for ICE detainees, including medical review at intake, medication distribution, daily nurse sick call, and access to medical and religious accommodations.
Booking charges are not final court charges. For the court record after a Plymouth County arrest, use MassCourts and the clerk. For the jail custody record, use PCCF or the sheriff RAO. For prosecution records, use the Plymouth County District Attorney's public-records request process.
Programs at PCCF
The sheriff's program page says PCCF offers Making Changes, education, GED/HiSET, ESOL, CAD/AutoCAD, OSHA 10, ServSafe, reentry advocacy, religious services, the S.A.V.E. Unit, a 62-bed substance-use disorder program, and print shop work. Reentry advocates address clothing, food, SNAP, housing, child support, employment, medical, mental-health, RMV, Social Security, Mass Rehab, substance-use treatment, and transportation needs. Exit planning starts before release for eligible participants.
The program screenshot below comes from the official PCCF inmate programs page.

Program pages show what is available at the facility, but they do not confirm that a specific inmate is enrolled.
Note: Confirm custody, visit approval, and mail rules with PCCF before traveling, sending funds, or mailing legal paperwork.
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