Maximum and minimum security (men), with restrictive-status and special-care units · State Prison · Indiana DOC

Wabash Valley Correctional Facility

Carlisle, Sullivan County, Indiana

Visiting schedules change without notice. Always call before traveling.

Call Visiting Office: (812) 398-5050 Info last verified: June 2026

A large maximum-security prison for men in Carlisle, in southwest Indiana, with restrictive-status and special-care units that serve the wider system.

Overview

Wabash Valley Correctional Facility, on Old U.S. Highway 41 in Carlisle, is a large prison for men spanning maximum and minimum security. It houses restrictive-status and special-care units — including mental-health units — that serve the wider prison system. It opened in 1992 and holds about 2,000 men. Because of its security level and mission, visiting and movement at the prison can be more controlled than at lower-security facilities, and arrangements vary by housing unit.

What Makes Wabash Valley Different

  • It houses restrictive-status and special-care units, including mental-health units, that serve the wider prison system.
  • It is a maximum-security facility, so visiting, movement, and property are more restricted than at lower-security prisons.
  • Some housing has non-contact visits, which differ from general-population contact visits — confirm the person’s housing and visit type.
  • It is in southwest Indiana, in Carlisle, Sullivan County, south of Terre Haute.

Visiting

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

The full registration process is in Visiting in Indiana.

Getting There and Parking

The prison is on Old U.S. Highway 41 in Carlisle, in southwest Indiana.

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

Nearby Services

The nearest 24-hour emergency room is Sullivan County Community Hospital, in nearby Sullivan. Terre Haute, with larger hospitals, is the nearest larger city to the north and has the full range of gas, food, and lodging.

Mail

Incoming personal mail goes to the prison, but the incarcerated person receives a photocopy, not the original. Indiana does not use an off-site mail vendor — each prison’s mailroom opens and photocopies incoming letters and photos in black and white and delivers the copy. Address mail with the person’s full name and IDOC number to the facility’s mailing address (above). Legal mail is opened in the person’s presence, and books must be new and shipped directly from a publisher or retailer. Full rules are in Mail & Packages.

Learn More

For detailed information about visiting and communicating with someone in an Indiana 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.