Minimum security (men) · State Prison · WA DOC

Olympic Corrections Center

Forks, Clallam County, Washington

Visiting schedules change without notice. Always call before traveling.

Call Visiting Office: (360) 374-7000 Info last verified: June 2026

A minimum-security men's prison and work camp near Forks, on the Olympic Peninsula in northwestern Washington.

Overview

Olympic Corrections Center (OCC), near Forks in Clallam County, is a minimum-security state prison for men on the Olympic Peninsula in the northwestern corner of Washington. As a minimum-custody facility it operates as a work camp, holding men classified at the lowest custody level. People are identified within the WA DOC system by a DOC number.

What Makes Olympic Different

  • It is one of Washington’s two minimum-custody men’s prisons (the other is Cedar Creek Corrections Center near Littlerock).
  • It operates as a work camp on the remote Olympic Peninsula near Forks, surrounded by the forests and public lands of the region.
  • Its location is remote — a long drive from the Puget Sound population centers, with limited services nearby.

Visiting

The statewide WA DOC rules above — the approved visitor list, the dress code, ID, and item limits — apply at the Olympic Corrections Center. The facility’s own arrangements:

The full visitor process is in Visiting in Washington.

Getting There and Parking

The facility is near Forks, in Clallam County, in the remote northwestern part of the Olympic Peninsula.

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

Nearby Services

Forks is the nearest town, with Port Angeles to the northeast as the larger population center for the area; the nearest 24-hour emergency rooms are in the Forks and Port Angeles area. Services near the facility are sparse given its remote location, so lodging, fuel, and dining options nearby are limited.

Mail

Incoming personal mail goes directly to the facility — Washington does not use an off-site mail-scanning vendor. Address mail with the incarcerated person’s committed name and DOC number to the facility’s mailing address (above); mailroom staff review incoming mail and publications. Books and magazines must come directly from a publisher or an approved vendor, and used books are accepted only from approved nonprofit organizations. Legal mail is opened in the person’s presence under the privileged-mail rules. Full rules are in Mail & Packages.

Learn More

For detailed information about visiting and communicating with someone in a Washington 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.