Minimum security (men) · State Prison · Illinois DOC

East Moline Correctional Center

East Moline, Rock Island County, Illinois

Visiting schedules change without notice. Always call before traveling.

Call Visiting Office: (309) 755-4511 Info last verified: June 2026

A minimum-security state prison for men in East Moline, in the Quad Cities of northwestern Illinois.

Overview

East Moline Correctional Center, in East Moline in Rock Island County, northwestern Illinois, overlooks the Mississippi River in the Quad Cities on the Iowa border. It is a minimum-security prison for men, opened in November 1980 on the grounds of a former state mental health facility. It offers programs and services — including academic and career and technical education, correctional industries, and chaplaincy — to prepare incarcerated people for return to the community.

What Makes East Moline Different

  • It is a minimum-security men’s prison in the Quad Cities of northwestern Illinois, on the Mississippi River.
  • It opened in November 1980 on the grounds of a former state mental health facility.
  • It offers academic, vocational, and industry programs oriented toward community reintegration.
  • The facility shown in the locator can change if the person is transferred, so confirm it before traveling.

Visiting

The statewide IDOC rules above — the approved visitor list, the dress code, ID, and item limits — apply at East Moline Correctional Center. The facility’s own arrangements:

The full visitor process is in Visiting in Illinois.

Getting There and Parking

The facility is in East Moline, in the Quad Cities of far northwestern Illinois, on the Iowa border.

Distances are approximate, based on map routing. Visitor parking is on site.

Nearby Services

The Quad Cities area — East Moline, Moline, and Rock Island in Illinois, with Davenport and Bettendorf across the river in Iowa — has gas, food, and lodging. The nearest 24-hour emergency rooms are in the Moline and Quad Cities area.

Mail

Illinois changed how it handles incoming personal mail in 2025, and the change became permanent in January 2026. Personal letters and photos sent to the facility are opened and scanned, and the incarcerated person receives a digital copy on their ICSolutions tablet (a free printed copy is available on request) rather than the original. Address mail with the person’s name and IDOC number, and confirm the current mailing address and format with IDOC and this facility before sending, since the program is recent. Legal mail is handled separately under privileged-mail rules, and publications (books, magazines) must come directly from a publisher, book club, or bookstore. Full rules are in Mail & Packages.

Learn More

For detailed information about visiting and communicating with someone in an Illinois state prison:

Sources

This page is compiled from the following publicly available sources. Policies change without notice — confirm current details with the facility before relying on them.