Bedford Hills Correctional Facility
Bedford Hills, Westchester County, New York
Visiting schedules change without notice. Always call before traveling.
Call Visiting Office: (914) 241-3100 Info last verified: June 2026New York's maximum-security prison for women, in Westchester County — it is also the women's reception and classification center and houses a regional medical unit for women.
Overview
Bedford Hills Correctional Facility, in Westchester County in the lower Hudson Valley north of New York City, is New York’s maximum-security prison for women. It is also the women’s reception and classification center, where newly committed women are received before assignment, and it houses a regional medical unit for women. Like all maximum-security facilities, visiting and movement are more controlled than at lower-security prisons, and women still in the reception process have limited visiting until classification is complete.
What Makes Bedford Hills Different
- It is a maximum-security prison, so visiting, movement, and property are more restricted.
- It is the women’s reception and classification center, so newly committed women have limited visiting during intake.
- It houses a regional medical unit for women, part of the statewide care system.
- It is in Westchester County, in the lower Hudson Valley north of New York City.
Visiting
The statewide DOCCS rules above — the approved visitor list, the dress code, ID, and item limits — apply at Bedford Hills Correctional Facility. The facility’s own arrangements:
The full visitor process is in Visiting in New York.
Getting There and Parking
The prison is on Harris Road in Bedford Hills, in northern Westchester County.
Distances are approximate, based on map routing. Visitor parking is on site.
Nearby Services
Bedford Hills and the surrounding Westchester County area have the full range of gas, food, and lodging, with more throughout the lower Hudson Valley. The nearest 24-hour emergency rooms are in the Westchester County area.
New York does not use an off-site mail vendor — incoming personal mail is opened and photocopied at the facility, and the incarcerated person receives the photocopies (images may also reach their JPay tablet) rather than the original letters. Address it with the person’s name and DIN (Department Identification Number) and the facility’s address. Legal mail goes to the facility and is handled under privileged-mail rules. Books, publications, and packages must be ordered from approved vendors. Full rules are in Mail & Packages.
Learn More
For detailed information about visiting and communicating with someone in a New York state prison:
- Visiting in New York — the approved visitor list, dress code, and visiting hours
- Mail & Packages — on-site photocopying and the approved-vendor package rule
- Phone & Video Calls — free Securus calls, JPay tablets, and video visits
- Sending Money — depositing through JPay
- Medical & Mental Health — sick call, in-house care, and oversight
- Transfers & Finding Someone — reception, finding someone, and the lookup
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.