Williamson County Texas Jail Search Inmate Lookup 2026

Williamson County Texas Jail Search — Inmate Lookup, Bail, Visitation & Contact Guide 2026

Find anyone currently in the Williamson County Jail in Georgetown, TX. Step-by-step inmate search, bail process, visitation scheduling, phone setup, mail rules, and commissary deposits — every link verified against official sheriff sources.

Updated April 2026 · Georgetown, TX · Williamson County Sheriff’s Office

Khushboo Bobade
Khushboo Bobade · Founder & Lead Researcher, Texas-Arrests.org · 10+ years in public records journalism · All links verified against wilcotx.gov · About the author
Williamson County Jail — At a Glance
Facility NameWilliamson County Jail
Address306 W 4th Street, Georgetown, TX 78626
Mailing AddressPO Box 2119, Georgetown, TX 78627
Jail Phone(512) 943-1365
Sheriff’s Office508 S Rock St, Georgetown TX 78626 · (512) 943-1300
SheriffRobert Cody
Chief of CorrectionsKathleen Pokluda
Capacity1,104 beds
Daily Population~600 inmates
Inmate Searchjudicialrecords.wilco.org
Visitation PlatformNCIC · ncic.com · 800-943-2189
Phone ProviderNCIC Inmate Telephone Services
Commissary DepositsAccess Corrections · TouchPay lobby kiosk
Official Corrections Pagewilcotx.gov/649/Corrections-Bureau
1,104
Bed Capacity
~600
Daily Population
24/7
Booking Desk
2 Free
Visits/Week
20 Min
Visit Length

The Williamson County Sheriff’s Office runs an online records inquiry system that shows current jail inmates and criminal case information. Unlike some Texas counties that use separate jail roster websites, Williamson County routes everything through their judicial records portal — which means you search the same system the clerks and deputies use internally.

1 Go to the official Williamson County Records Inquiry portal: judicialrecords.wilco.org — This is the only official URL for inmate and case searches. Do not use third-party sites that charge fees for information available free from the county.

2 Select “Criminal Case Records” from the search menu. This section covers all active bookings, pending cases, and historical arrest records. You can also search Civil, Family, and Probate records from the same portal.

3 Enter the person’s last name (required) and first name (optional). For common names like “Smith” or “Garcia,” add the first name to narrow results. Use the Soundex checkbox if you are unsure of the exact spelling — it finds names that sound similar. Use an asterisk (*) as a wildcard for partial names: “Gonzale*” returns both Gonzales and Gonzalez.

4 Click the case number to view full details. The results show booking number, charges, bond amount, court date, judge, attorney, and facility. A red “W” icon next to any case number means there is an active warrant. Write down the booking number (SO Number) — you need it for visitation, phone setup, commissary, and mail.

5 If you cannot find them online, call the jail directly. Phone: (512) 943-1365 — staff are available 24/7 and can confirm whether someone is in custody by name or booking number. New bookings may take 2–4 hours to appear in the online system, especially during shift changes and weekends.

💡 What You Need From the Search Results: Write down these 4 things immediately — everything else (visitation, phone, mail, bond) depends on them: (1) SO Number / Booking Number, (2) Exact charges and penal code sections, (3) Bond amount and type, (4) Facility housing assignment (specific pod letter if shown).

Williamson County Bail and Bond — How It Works Here

After booking into the Williamson County Jail, the arrested person must appear before a magistrate within 24 to 48 hours. The magistrate sets bail based on the severity of charges, criminal history, and flight risk. Here is how each bond option works specifically in Williamson County.

💵 Cash Bond

Pay 100% of bail to the Williamson County Clerk. Fully refunded after case closes. Bring cash, money order, or cashier’s check to the Justice Center at 405 MLK St, Georgetown.

🤝 Surety Bond (Bondsman)

Pay 10% non-refundable premium to a licensed bondsman. Standard for most cases. Verify the bondsman’s license at tdi.texas.gov before paying anything.

📝 PR Bond

Released on a signed promise to appear. $0 cost. Magistrate must grant it — a defense attorney can argue for it at the hearing. Not available for all charges.

💡 Call a defense attorney BEFORE calling a bondsman. A bondsman only posts bail. An attorney can argue for reduced bail or a PR bond at the magistrate hearing — potentially saving you thousands. Texas State Bar Lawyer Referral: 1-800-504-2092 · texasbar.com
🔴 Jail Phone Warning: Every call, video visit, and message from Williamson County Jail is recorded and monitored by the DA’s office. Never discuss the case, say “I’m sorry,” or ask “what happened.” Only discuss logistics: lawyer, bills, childcare, bail.

How to Visit Someone in the Williamson County Jail

Williamson County Jail uses NCIC for all visitation — both in-person kiosk visits inside the facility and remote video visits from your phone, tablet, or computer at home. Walk-in visits without a scheduled appointment are not available. Here is exactly how to set it up.

1 The inmate must add you to their approved visitor list first. You cannot add yourself. The inmate submits your name through the internal system. This takes 24–48 hours to process. Confirm you are on the list before making any trip.

2 Create an account with NCIC: Go to ncic.com or call 800-943-2189. You will need your government-issued photo ID and the inmate’s name and SO Number to link your accounts.

3 Add funds to your NCIC account if you want remote video visits from home. On-site kiosk visits at the jail are free (2 per week). Remote visits from home cost approximately $0.25/minute with a $2 connection fee.

4 Schedule your visit through NCIC. Select the inmate, choose a date and time slot, and confirm. Arrive at least 15 minutes early for in-person visits. Bring only your ID and keys — nothing else is allowed inside.

Visitation Rules

  • 2 free visits per week per inmate. Each visit lasts 20 minutes maximum.
  • Valid state-issued photo ID required for all visitors over 18. No expired IDs accepted.
  • Visitors under 14 must be accompanied by a parent or guardian. Ages 15–16 must be accompanied by an adult.
  • Strict dress code: No shorts, no sleeveless tops, no see-through clothing, no orange/white resembling inmate uniforms. Underwire bras may trigger metal detectors.
  • Attorneys (with bar card) and clergy may visit 24/7 without scheduling.
  • Check your own warrants first. IDs are run at the entrance — an active warrant means you are arrested at the door.
📅 Visitation Schedule by Pod: Pods G, I, K, M, O, Q, S, U — Tuesday, Thursday, or Saturday (pick two). Pods H, J, L, N, P, R, T, V — Monday, Wednesday, or Sunday (pick two). Visitation times: 8:00 AM–11:00 AM, then 5:30 PM–6:30 PM, then 7:30 PM–9:00 PM. Arrive 15 minutes before your scheduled slot.

How to Set Up Phone Calls with a Williamson County Jail Inmate

All phone services at the Williamson County Jail are managed by NCIC Inmate Telephone Services. Jail phones are outbound only — the inmate calls you. You cannot call them. Your phone account must be funded before they dial, or the call drops immediately with no explanation to the inmate.

1 Create a phone account with NCIC at ncic.com or call 800-943-2189. Link your phone number to the inmate’s SO Number.

2 Add funds to your account. Start with $10–$20 to test. Calls cost approximately $1.00/minute with a $3.95 connection fee per call. NCIC accepts Visa, MasterCard, and Green Dot prepaid cards.

3 Wait for the inmate to call you. Calling hours are typically 7:00 AM – 10:00 PM. The inmate can also purchase a phone card from commissary for $12.00 (calls then cost approximately $1.00/minute without the connection fee).

🔴 All calls are recorded and monitored. The Williamson County DA’s office reviews jail calls as part of case investigation. Never discuss the case, evidence, witnesses, plea options, or anything related to the charges. Discuss only logistics: attorney contact info, bills, childcare, bail arrangements.

How to Send Mail to an Inmate in the Williamson County Jail

Williamson County changed its mail system significantly. Regular personal mail (letters, postcards, greeting cards) is now scanned through a third-party processing center and delivered digitally to inmates via kiosks inside the jail. Legal mail still goes directly to the facility.

📬 Regular Personal Mail

Scanned and delivered digitally to inmate kiosks. Must include inmate’s full name and SO/Booking Number on the envelope.

Send to:
NCIC-Williamson County Jail
Inmate Name – SO Number
PO Box 591
Longview, TX 75606

⚖️ Legal Mail / Court Documents / Books

Sent directly to the facility. Legal mail is opened in the inmate’s presence but contents are not read by staff.

Send to:
Williamson County Jail
Inmate Last Name, First Name, DOB
PO Box 2119
Georgetown, TX 78627

Mail Rules

  • Blue or black ink only. No colored ink, markers, or crayons.
  • No stickers, glitter, perfume, tape, or white-out on letters.
  • No stamps, stamped envelopes, or pens enclosed inside the envelope.
  • No cash, money orders, or gift cards in mail — use commissary deposit methods instead.
  • Books must be paperback only and ordered from Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or a store that ships directly to the jail. No true crime or sexually explicit books.
  • Photographs are allowed — standard prints only, no Polaroids, no inappropriate content.

How to Put Money on an Inmate’s Commissary Account

Inmates use commissary funds to buy hygiene items, snacks, writing supplies, and phone cards. Commissary orders are placed once per week (Tuesdays, delivered within 1–2 days). Here are all the ways to deposit money.

💻 Online — Access Corrections

Deposit online 24/7. Credited within 1–4 hours. You need the inmate’s full name and SO Number.

accesscorrections.com → · 866-345-1884

🏧 Lobby Kiosk — TouchPay

Cash, Visa, MasterCard, or Green Dot at the kiosk in the jail lobby. Facility Locater Number: 278626.

touchpayonline.com → · 866-232-1899

📮 By Mail — Money Order / Cashier’s Check

Make payable to “Inmate Trust Fund.” Include inmate’s full name, DOB, and SO Number.

Mail to: Inmate Trust Fund
PO Box 1939
Georgetown, TX 78627

💡 Commissary orders happen once per week (Tuesdays). If you deposit money on a Wednesday, the inmate cannot use it until the following Tuesday. Plan deposits to arrive by Monday to ensure they can order on Tuesday.

📍 Williamson County Jail Location

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find out if someone is in the Williamson County Jail?

Search by name or booking number at judicialrecords.wilco.org (free). Or call the jail directly at (512) 943-1365 — staff are available 24/7. New bookings may take 2–4 hours to appear online.

What is the phone number for the Williamson County Jail?

Jail main line: (512) 943-1365. Sheriff’s Office: (512) 943-1300. NCIC visitation/phone: 800-943-2189.

How do I visit someone in the Williamson County Jail?

All visits go through NCIC. The inmate must add you to their visitor list first (24–48 hours). Register at ncic.com. On-site kiosk visits are free (2/week, 20 min each). Remote video visits cost ~$0.25/min. Bring valid state-issued photo ID. Arrive 15 minutes early.

How do I send money to an inmate in the Williamson County Jail?

Online: accesscorrections.com. Lobby kiosk: TouchPay (Facility Code 278626). By mail: money order payable to “Inmate Trust Fund,” PO Box 1939, Georgetown TX 78627. Commissary orders happen Tuesdays only — deposit by Monday.

How do I send mail to a Williamson County Jail inmate?

Personal mail is scanned digitally. Send to: NCIC-Williamson County Jail, Inmate Name – SO Number, PO Box 591, Longview TX 75606. Legal mail goes directly to: Williamson County Jail, PO Box 2119, Georgetown TX 78627. Blue/black ink only, no stickers or perfume.

Can I call an inmate in the Williamson County Jail?

No. Jail phones are outbound only — the inmate calls you. Set up a prepaid account with NCIC at ncic.com or call 800-943-2189. Fund your account before they try to call. Calls cost approximately $1/minute plus $3.95 connection fee. All calls are recorded and monitored.

What are the visitation hours?

Varies by pod. Pods G/I/K/M/O/Q/S/U: Tuesday, Thursday, or Saturday. Pods H/J/L/N/P/R/T/V: Monday, Wednesday, or Sunday. Times: 8–11 AM, 5:30–6:30 PM, 7:30–9 PM. Each inmate gets 2 visits per week, 20 minutes each. You must pick your two days.

How big is the Williamson County Jail?

The facility has 1,104 beds with a daily population of approximately 600 inmates. A direct supervision facility was opened in 2003. The jail is managed by the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office under Sheriff Robert Cody with Chief of Corrections Kathleen Pokluda.

Related Guides on This Site

Disclaimer: Texas-Arrests.org is an independent educational website not affiliated with the Williamson County Sheriff’s Office, Williamson County government, or any law enforcement agency. All links point to official .gov sources. Jail records are public information. An arrest or booking does not imply guilt — all individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty. This site does not provide legal advice. For official information, contact the Williamson County Jail at (512) 943-1365 or the Sheriff’s Office at (512) 943-1300. Written by Khushboo Bobade · Last verified: April 2026.
Editorial & Verification Notice This guide was manually written and researched by humans, not AI. We personally verify every link to ensure it leads directly to official government databases, keeping you safe from spam and third-party redirects. All screenshots and instructions are based on our actual manual testing of these systems. We frequently update this page to ensure accuracy.

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