Western Correctional Center for Women
Black Mountain, Buncombe County, North Carolina
Visiting schedules change without notice. Always call before traveling.
Call Visiting Office: 828-259-6000 Info last verified: June 2026A minimum-security state prison for women in Black Mountain, in the western North Carolina mountains near Asheville.
Overview
Western Correctional Center for Women, on Lake Eden Road in Black Mountain, Buncombe County, is a minimum-security state prison for women in the western North Carolina mountains near Asheville. It is one of North Carolina’s three women’s prisons — the others are the NC Correctional Institution for Women in Raleigh and Anson Correctional Institution in Polkton — and the only one in the western part of the state. NCDAC lists a rated capacity of about 366 and gives an established date of July 7, 2008.
What Makes Western Correctional Center for Women Different
- It is a minimum-custody women’s prison serving the western part of the state.
- NCDAC describes it as a reentry facility, with programming oriented toward release.
- Programs listed by NCDAC include Adult Basic Education/GED, computer skills, Focus On Freedom, horticulture, hospitality, and veterinary care.
- It is the only one of North Carolina’s three women’s prisons located in the western mountains.
Visiting
The statewide NCDAC rules above — the approved visitor list, the dress code, ID, and item limits — apply at the Western Correctional Center for Women. The facility’s own arrangements:
The full approval process is in Visiting in North Carolina.
Getting There and Parking
The prison is on Lake Eden Road in Black Mountain, in Buncombe County in the western North Carolina mountains, east of Asheville off I-40.
Distances are approximate, based on map routing. Visitor parking is on site.
Nearby Services
Black Mountain and the nearby Asheville area have lodging, gas, and food. The nearest hospital emergency rooms are in the Asheville area.
Incoming personal mail does not go to the prison. North Carolina sends personal mail to an off-site vendor, TextBehind, which opens and scans it and delivers a digital copy to the incarcerated person’s tablet; original letters, cards, and packages are returned to the sender. Address personal mail with the person’s full name and OPUS number and the full (unabbreviated) prison name to: TextBehind, P.O. Box 247, Phoenix, MD 21131 — and include the sender’s full first and last name in the return address. Legal mail is exempt and goes directly to the facility. Books and publications must come from a publisher or online retailer, shipped to the prison’s street address, not the TextBehind box. Full rules are in Mail & Packages.
Learn More
For detailed information about visiting and communicating with someone in a North Carolina state prison:
- Visiting in North Carolina — the approved visitor list, the application, and scheduling
- Mail & Packages — the TextBehind mail-scanning process and what still goes to the facility
- Phone & Video Calls — ViaPath calls, tablets, and GettingOut video visits
- Sending Money — depositing through ViaPath/ConnectNetwork and TouchPay
- Medical & Mental Health — sick-call co-pays, mental health, and the grievance board
- Transfers & Finding Someone — reception, the locator, and transfers
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.