If you searched “text inmate without corrlinks,” you probably already know the frustration. Maybe your facility uses Corrlinks but the app keeps crashing on your phone. Maybe your loved one is at a facility that doesn’t use it at all. Or maybe you just want something simpler than logging into a clunky desktop portal every time you want to send a two-line message. Whatever the reason: you can text an inmate without Corrlinks, and the process is more straightforward than most people think.
What’s the actual problem with Corrlinks?
Corrlinks is a secure messaging system used in many federal and some state facilities. It works, but it has real downsides for families. The app is known for logging you out constantly. Messages can take hours to arrive. And if you’re on a mobile phone, the experience feels like using a website from 2008. More importantly, not every facility offers Corrlinks. Even within facilities that do, inmates sometimes lose access due to disciplinary issues or facility policy changes. If any of this sounds familiar, you’re not alone — and you have options.
What you actually need to text an inmate
To send a text message to someone inside, you need a service that the facility allows and that works on your end without special software. The core requirement is simple: the inmate needs access to a tablet or kiosk where they can read and reply. Most facilities in the U.S. and Canada now provide some form of digital messaging. The trick is finding a service that doesn’t require you to use Corrlinks specifically.
One solid option is InmateDB. It lets you send messages, photos, and letters from your phone or computer. The inmate receives them on their tablet and can text back to any phone number in the U.S. or Canada. That last part is key: they can reply directly to your cell phone, not just through the app. So you don’t have to keep checking a separate inbox — the reply comes to you like a normal text.
How it actually works (the part most guides skip)
When you sign up for InmateDB, you create an account and add the inmate by their facility and ID number. The service costs $19.99 per month, but every new inmate you add gets a 5-day free trial. So you can test it before committing any money. During the trial, you can send messages and see if the inmate receives them and replies. If it doesn’t work for your facility, you lose nothing but a few minutes.
After you send a message on InmateDB, it goes through their system to the facility’s tablet network. The inmate sees it the next time they log in. How fast that happens depends on the facility’s schedule — some let inmates use tablets all day, others limit it to certain hours. The message itself usually arrives within minutes on the facility’s end, but the inmate might not see it until their next tablet session. That’s normal, not a glitch.
Will the inmate actually get the message?
This is the worry I hear most from families. You send a message, hear nothing back, and start wondering if it went through. Here’s what to know: InmateDB delivers the message to the facility’s system. From there, the facility controls when the inmate can see it. If the inmate hasn’t replied in a day or two, it’s usually because they haven’t checked their tablet, not because the message failed. If you’re worried, send a short test message during the free trial and ask the inmate to confirm they received it during your next phone call. That one check will save you days of uncertainty.
What if the inmate doesn’t reply?
There are a few reasons an inmate might not text back. They might be in a restricted housing unit with limited tablet access. They might have run out of tablet time for the day. Or they might have simply not figured out how to reply — the inmate interface varies by facility, and some men and women find it confusing at first. If you don’t get a reply within 48 hours, try asking during a phone call or visit if they saw your message. If they didn’t, contact InmateDB support to check delivery status. If they did but couldn’t figure out how to reply, walk them through it on your next call. It happens more often than you’d think.
Is this legit? (Yes, here’s how to be sure)
Any time you pay for a service to communicate with someone in prison, you should be cautious. Here’s what makes InmateDB different from sketchy services: it’s a subscription, not a per-message fee. You pay $19.99 per month no matter how many messages you send. That’s it. No hidden charges for photos, no extra fees for replies. The service has been around long enough that you can find real reviews from families. And the free trial means you can verify it works before you pay a cent.
One thing to check: make sure your loved one’s facility allows InmateDB. Most do, but a small number of facilities use exclusive contracts with a single provider. If you’re not sure, call the facility’s tablet program coordinator — they’ll usually tell you which services are approved. Or just start the free trial and see if the inmate’s ID is accepted. If it’s not, you’ll know immediately.
Where to start
If you’re tired of struggling with Corrlinks or just want a simpler way to text someone inside, the best first step is the free trial at InmateDB. Sign up, add the inmate, and send one message. Ask them to reply to your phone. If it works, you’ve got a reliable way to stay in touch without the app headaches. If it doesn’t, you’re out nothing and you can try another option. Either way, you’ll know — and that’s better than wondering.
