Eastern Kentucky Correctional Complex
West Liberty, Morgan County, Kentucky
Visiting schedules change without notice. Always call before traveling.
Call Visiting Office: 606-743-2800 Info last verified: June 2026A medium-security state prison for men in West Liberty, Kentucky — one of the largest men's prisons in eastern Kentucky.
Overview
Eastern Kentucky Correctional Complex is a state prison for men operated by the Kentucky Department of Corrections. It is in West Liberty, the seat of Morgan County, in the mountains of eastern Kentucky. The facility houses men in medium custody.
Kentucky assigns a custody level based on factors that include sentence length, time remaining, and conduct, and a person’s custody level can change during incarceration. The custody class and housing unit held at a given prison affect program access and whether visits are contact or non-contact, so families confirm the arrangement that applies to the specific person before a first visit.
What Makes the Eastern Kentucky Correctional Complex Different
Eastern Kentucky Correctional Complex is one of the larger men’s prisons in the eastern part of the state, serving the mountainous region between Lexington and the West Virginia line. Its location in rural Morgan County means visitors often travel a considerable distance over two-lane mountain roads, and lodging and dining near the prison are limited. Families coming from outside the region typically plan the drive and any overnight stay around the facility’s posted visiting schedule, which is set by the institution rather than by a statewide office.
Visiting
The statewide KY DOC rules above — the approved visitor list, the dress code, ID, and item limits — apply at the Eastern Kentucky Correctional Complex. The facility’s own arrangements:
Getting There and Parking
Eastern Kentucky Correctional Complex is at 200 Road to Justice in West Liberty, in Morgan County in eastern Kentucky. West Liberty sits along US Highway 460 and KY Route 7, roughly between the Mountain Parkway corridor to the south and Interstate 64 to the north. The nearest large commercial airport is in the Lexington area to the west.
Parking is on site. Visitors confirm current entry procedures, the visitor-processing location, and what may be brought onto the grounds with the facility before arriving, because electronic devices and personal items are generally not permitted inside — visitors may typically bring only identification, a car key, and coins for vending machines.
Nearby Services
West Liberty has limited lodging and dining, with additional options in the surrounding Morgan County communities and a wider range in the Lexington area to the west and along the Interstate 64 corridor to the north. Emergency medical care is available regionally, with larger hospitals in the Lexington area. Visitors traveling a long distance generally find the most options for fuel, food, and overnight stays in the larger towns along the Mountain Parkway and Interstate 64.
Incoming personal mail goes directly to the institution, addressed to the person by their committed name and Kentucky DOC inmate number, followed by the facility’s mailing address. Mail is opened and inspected for contraband before delivery; under Kentucky Corrections policy, correspondence is delivered to the person within 48 hours of receipt on normal workdays.
Legal and other privileged mail — from a licensed attorney, a court, a government official, the Department of Public Advocacy, or Corrections officials — is opened only in the person’s presence and should be clearly marked as legal mail.
Books and magazines must be shipped new, directly from a publisher or an approved retailer; items sent by individuals are refused. Packages are limited to approved-vendor care packages arranged through the facility.
Verify the exact mailing address, current mail rules, and approved package vendor with the facility before sending anything, because procedures change.
Learn More
- Visiting a Kentucky prison — approved visitor lists, scheduling, dress code, and what to expect at the gate.
- Sending mail in Kentucky — how to address mail, what is allowed, and how books and packages are handled.
- Phone calls and video visits — setting up calls, video visits, and messaging with someone in a Kentucky prison.
- Sending money — how to deposit funds to a person’s account and what the money can be used for.
- Medical care — how health care works in Kentucky prisons and how to raise a medical concern.
- Intake, classification, and transfers — where people enter the system, how they are classified, and why some state inmates are held in county jails.
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.