Prison Professors
Minimum SecurityFCIMale

FCC Tucson

Tucson, AZ· WXR Region

BOP RegionWXR

About FCC Tucson

FCC Tucson is a minimum-security Federal Correctional Institution (FCI) located in Tucson, Arizona 85756, housing male inmates. Currently showing zero population, this facility operates under the Western Region (WXR) of the Federal Bureau of Prisons and can be reached at 520-574-7100. As a minimum-security facility, Tucson FCI typically houses inmates who pose minimal risk to public safety and are nearing the end of their sentences.

The facility does not offer the Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP), and specific medical care level information is not currently available. While detailed program information is limited, minimum-security federal facilities generally provide work programs, educational opportunities, and pre-release preparation services to help inmates successfully reintegrate into society. The facility operates as a standalone institution without an adjacent camp or Federal Satellite Low (FSL) component.

Located in southern Arizona, FCC Tucson is accessible to families traveling from throughout the Southwest region. While specific visiting procedures are not detailed in available data, the facility follows standard BOP visiting policies for minimum-security institutions. Prison Professors can help individuals preparing to surrender at Tucson FCI and their families understand what to expect during incarceration, develop preparation strategies, and navigate the federal prison system effectively.

Contact & Location

Mailing Address (Inmates)

INMATE NAME & REGISTER NUMBERTucson8901 S. Wilmot RoadTucson, AZ 85756

Do NOT send money to an inmate using this facility's address. All funds must be sent to the processing center in Des Moines, Iowa.

GPS: 32.088492, -110.857978

Population & Housing

Total population: 0

Programs & Education

Program information for this facility is being compiled.

Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP)

RDAP Not Available

FCC Tucson does not currently offer RDAP.

The Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP) is the Bureau of Prisons' most intensive substance-abuse treatment program. It is a 500-hour, unit-based program lasting 9 to 12 months, followed by community-based transitional treatment. Participants who successfully complete RDAP may be eligible for up to a 12-month reduction in their sentence under 18 U.S.C. § 3621(e).

Facilities that do not offer RDAP may still provide the Non-Residential Drug Abuse Program (NR-DAP), a less intensive outpatient-style treatment, or the Drug Abuse Education (DAE) course, a shorter psychoeducational program. Both can help demonstrate progress toward rehabilitation but do not qualify for the same sentence reduction as RDAP.

Medical Care

Medical care level information is being compiled.

Standard BOP Medical Services

Sick Call Process

Inmates request medical attention by submitting a cop-out (Inmate Request to Staff) or a sick call form, typically available in each housing unit. Sick call is held on scheduled mornings — a staff member triages requests and inmates are seen by mid-level providers or physicians based on need.

Emergency Care

All BOP facilities provide 24/7 emergency medical coverage. In a medical emergency, staff will initiate on-site treatment and arrange outside hospital transport if necessary. Inmates should notify any staff member immediately for emergencies.

Dental Services

Routine dental exams are provided on an annual basis, including cleanings and necessary X-rays. Emergency dental care — such as treatment for pain, infection, or trauma — is available on a priority basis. Elective procedures are limited and subject to approval.

Mental Health Services

Each facility has psychology staff who provide individual counseling, group therapy, crisis intervention, and mental health evaluations. Inmates can self-refer by submitting a cop-out to the Psychology Department. Inmates on psychiatric medications are monitored regularly.

Medications

Chronic care medications (e.g., blood pressure, insulin, psychiatric meds) are dispensed through a scheduled "pill line." Inmates must report at designated times to receive their medications. Over-the-counter medications are available through commissary; some may be prescribed at no cost.

Co-Pay Information

The BOP charges a $2.00 co-pay for inmate-initiated health care visits. Exemptions apply to follow-up visits requested by medical staff, emergency care, chronic care appointments, mental health contacts, preventive services, and prenatal care. Inmates with insufficient funds are not denied care.

Good to Know

Medical care quality and wait times vary by facility. Inmates with pre-existing conditions should bring documentation of their medical history, current medications, and treating physicians to assist with continuity of care during intake processing.

Have questions about medical care at FCC Tucson? Share your experience on your Prison Professors profile to help others prepare.

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Self-Surrender Guide for FCC Tucson

Minimum security · Federal Correctional Institution · Tucson, AZ

If you've been designated to self-surrender, it's natural to feel anxious. This guide walks you through exactly what to expect so you can arrive prepared and focused. Thousands of people have been through this process — and the more prepared you are, the smoother your transition will be.

Arrival and Check-In Process
When self-surrendering at FCC Tucson, arrive during regular business hours as specified in your surrender instructions, typically between 8:00 AM and 2:00 PM on weekdays. Bring your surrender documents, a form of government-issued identification, and your commitment order. The initial processing will include verification of your identity, documentation review, and basic intake procedures that may take several hours to complete.

What to Bring and What to Leave Behind
You may bring a small amount of cash (typically under $300, but verify current limits), prescription medications in original containers with current prescriptions, and reading glasses if needed. Do NOT bring jewelry, electronics, weapons, drugs, excessive cash, or any contraband items. Wedding rings are typically the only jewelry permitted, but policies vary. Leave all personal items with family members, as these cannot be stored by the facility.

First 24-48 Hours
Your initial days will involve medical screening, psychological evaluation, and orientation programs where you'll learn facility rules, daily schedules, and available services. You'll receive institution clothing, bedding, and basic hygiene items. During this time, you'll be assigned housing and may have limited privileges while completing intake procedures. Phone calls to family may be restricted initially until your phone list is approved.

Prison Professors Preparation Tips
Prison Professors recommends completing a thorough self-surrender preparation checklist weeks before your report date. This includes organizing family finances, understanding BOP policies, and mentally preparing for the institutional environment. Consider developing a personal mission statement and goals for your time in custody to maintain focus and motivation throughout your sentence.

Emotional Preparation for You and Your Family
The surrender process is emotionally challenging for both inmates and families. Prison Professors suggests having honest conversations with loved ones about expectations, communication plans, and support systems. Prepare family members for the adjustment period and establish regular communication schedules once permitted. Remember that minimum-security facilities typically offer more flexibility and programs to help maintain family connections during incarceration.

Before You Surrender

  • Get your affairs in order: power of attorney, finances, family arrangements.
  • Confirm your surrender date and time with your attorney.
  • The facility may send a surrender letter with specific instructions — follow them exactly.
  • Bring valid government-issued photo ID.
  • Arrive on time — arriving late can result in a warrant for your arrest.
  • Consider having someone drive you. Your vehicle cannot remain at the facility.

What to Bring

Most facilities allow very little on surrender day. Wear simple, comfortable clothing — you'll change into facility-issued clothing upon arrival.

Generally Allowed

  • Valid government-issued photo ID
  • Legal documents related to your case
  • Prescription medications in original pharmacy containers with a valid prescription
  • A small amount of cash (typically $20–$50, deposited to your commissary account)
  • Plain wedding band (no stones)
  • Religious medallion

Do NOT Bring

  • Cell phone or electronics
  • Excess clothing or luggage
  • Food or beverages
  • Jewelry beyond a plain wedding band
  • Weapons of any kind

What to Expect on Arrival

1

Processing: fingerprints, photographs, medical screening, and intake interview.

2

You'll receive facility-issued clothing, bedding, and hygiene items.

3

Orientation program (typically 1–2 weeks) covering facility rules, daily schedule, and expectations.

4

You'll be assigned a housing unit, a counselor, and a register number if you don't already have one.

5

The first few days are the hardest — this is completely normal.

First Week Tips

  • Be respectful and observe before acting. Take time to learn the culture.
  • Learn the daily schedule immediately — meals, count times, recreation, work call.
  • Set up your commissary account and phone list as soon as possible.
  • Reach out to your counselor for questions about programs, visiting, and mail.
  • Start thinking about programming: education, vocational training, RDAP if applicable.

Preparing to surrender at FCC Tucson? Create your free Prison Professors profile to start documenting your journey and access resources from others who've been through this process.

Recreation

Standard BOP recreation information for a minimum-security facility. Actual offerings at FCC Tucson may vary.

Outdoor Recreation

Recreation yards at FCI facilities are enclosed and supervised. Outdoor recreation is available during structured periods — typically mornings, afternoons, and weekends. Men move to the yard during designated call-outs, and the schedule may vary by housing unit.

  • Walking and jogging track
  • Basketball courts
  • Handball/racquetball courts
  • Bocce ball
  • Horseshoe pits
  • Softball field
  • Soccer field

Indoor Recreation

Fitness Equipment

  • Cable weight machines and resistance equipment
  • Stationary bikes and elliptical trainers
  • Stair-steppers

Note on free weights: The BOP removed free weights from most federal facilities in the mid-1990s. Today, the vast majority of facilities offer only cable machines, resistance bands, and bodyweight exercise stations — not free weights.

Activities

  • Table tennis
  • Card and board games
  • Pick-up basketball
  • Music room (instruments available at some facilities)

Leisure Activities

  • Arts and crafts workshops
  • Hobby craft programs (leatherwork, painting, drawing, crochet)
  • Intramural sports leagues and tournaments
  • Holiday and special-event tournaments
  • Movie nights (typically weekends)

Library

All federal facilities are required to provide access to a law library so that inmates can research legal matters and prepare court filings. Most facilities also maintain a leisure library with fiction, non-fiction, and reference materials.

  • Law library with legal reference materials
  • Access to electronic legal research tools
  • Leisure library (fiction, non-fiction, self-help)
  • Newspapers and magazine subscriptions
  • Interlibrary loan requests (at some facilities)
  • Typewriter or computer access for legal work

Recreation schedules are posted at each facility and vary by season, staffing levels, and institutional operations. Weekend and holiday schedules often differ from weekday routines. Check with FCC Tucson's Recreation Department for the current schedule.

Work Assignments & UNICOR

Work Assignments

All medically able inmates at FCC Tucson are required to work unless participating in a full-time education or vocational training program. Work assignments are made by the Unit Team based on institutional need, the inmate's skills and background, and current program participation.

Work assignments at FCC Tucson are performed within the facility perimeter.

Common Work Assignments

Food Service
Facilities Maintenance (Plumbing, Electrical, HVAC)
Landscaping & Grounds
Orderly / Janitorial
Laundry
Education Tutor
Recreation Aide
Commissary
Chapel Orderly
Library Aide
Institutional Pay

Standard institutional work assignments pay between $0.12 and $0.40 per hour. Pay grades are determined by position and performance.

Work Performance

Good work performance is factored into program reviews and can positively affect custody classification, housing placement, and eligibility for preferred assignments.

UNICOR (Federal Prison Industries)

UNICOR, also known as Federal Prison Industries (FPI), is a wholly owned government corporation that operates manufacturing and service operations inside federal prisons. UNICOR provides inmates with job training and work experience in real-world industries while producing goods and services for federal agencies.

$0.23 – $1.15 per hour

UNICOR pays significantly more than standard institutional work assignments, making it one of the most sought-after jobs in the federal system.

Products & Services UNICOR May Produce

Furniture & cabinetry
Textiles & clothing
Electronics & cable assemblies
Fleet management & vehicular components
Call center services
Printing & bindery

Application & Waitlist

Inmates must apply for UNICOR positions and there is often a waitlist. Priority is generally given to inmates with court-ordered financial obligations and those nearing release.

Benefits of UNICOR Participation

UNICOR participation is viewed favorably by staff and can positively impact time credits under the First Step Act, custody level reviews, and halfway house recommendations.

UNICOR Availability

Not all federal facilities have UNICOR operations. Contact FCC Tucson to confirm current UNICOR availability and operations.

First Step Act Time Credits

The First Step Act (FSA) allows eligible inmates to earn time credits toward early release or transfer to supervised release (halfway house or home confinement) through productive work assignments, educational programs, and vocational training.

10 – 15 days of credit per 30 days

Eligible inmates earn 10 days of time credits for every 30 days of successful participation in Evidence-Based Recidivism Reduction (EBRR) programs or productive activities. Inmates assessed as minimum or low risk earn an enhanced rate of 15 days per 30-day period.

Work assignments — including institutional jobs and UNICOR — count as productive activities under the FSA. Combined with program participation, these credits can meaningfully reduce time served. Eligibility depends on factors including offense type, risk assessment score, and disciplinary record.

Commissary

Commissary information for this facility is being compiled.

Communication

Staying connected with a loved one at FCC Tucson is important. The Bureau of Prisons offers several ways for inmates and their families to communicate, including email, telephone, traditional mail, and video visiting. Each method has its own rules, costs, and limitations — here is what you need to know.

TRULINCS Email

TRULINCS (Trust Fund Limited Inmate Computer System) is the BOP's electronic messaging system. It is the primary way inmates at FCC Tucson send and receive email. Messages are text-only — no attachments, images, or formatted text.

Cost

~$0.05/min

Format

Text only

Inmates purchase email credits (stamps or units) using funds from their commissary account. They are charged per minute of usage while composing or reading messages. Incoming messages from family members are free for the inmate to receive, but the inmate pays to read and reply.

Getting Set Up

  • The inmate must add you to their approved contact list from inside the facility — family members cannot initiate the connection.
  • Once added, you will receive an email invitation from CorrLinks, the external-facing system that connects to TRULINCS.
  • Create a free CorrLinks account at corrlinks.com and accept the inmate's contact request.

Limitations

  • Text only — no photos, PDFs, or attachments of any kind
  • All messages are monitored and may be read by facility staff
  • Contact list must be approved before messaging can begin
  • Messages may be delayed during facility lockdowns or system maintenance

Telephone

Inmates at FCC Tucson can make outgoing phone calls to approved contacts. Calls are placed from designated phones within the housing units during scheduled hours.

300

Minutes / Month

15

Min Per Call

Monitored

& Recorded

  • Most inmates receive 300 minutes per month. Inmates on certain disciplinary statuses may have reduced allotments.
  • Each call is limited to approximately 15 minutes. A warning tone sounds before the call disconnects.
  • All calls are monitored and recorded except those designated as attorney-client privileged communications.
  • Inmates use their commissary account balance to pay for calls. Families can also set up prepaid phone accounts through the BOP's approved telephone provider to reduce per-minute costs.
  • International calls are available but cost significantly more than domestic calls.

Tip for Families

Setting up a prepaid account in advance ensures your loved one can call you as soon as they arrive at the facility. Contact the BOP's telephone provider to establish an account using the inmate's register number.

Mail

Traditional mail remains one of the most reliable ways to stay in touch with someone at FCC Tucson. All correspondence must include the inmate's full legal name and register number on the envelope and letter.

Contact the facility for the correct inmate mailing address.

What You Can Send

  • Letters and cards
  • Photographs (standard prints — no Polaroids or instant photos)
  • Newspaper and magazine clippings
  • Books and magazines sent directly from the publisher or an approved vendor (Amazon, Barnes & Noble, etc.)
  • Religious materials

What You Cannot Send

  • Packages (unless pre-approved by staff)
  • Cash, checks, or money orders to the facility
  • Stamps or stamped envelopes
  • Stickers, glitter, or glued items
  • Crayon or marker drawings
  • Perfumed or scented paper

Important

All incoming and outgoing mail is inspected by facility staff. Mail that violates BOP policy will be rejected and returned to the sender. Always include a return address on your envelope.

Video Visiting

The Bureau of Prisons has rolled out video visiting capabilities at many federal facilities, including institutions like FCC Tucson. Video visits allow families to see and speak with their loved one face-to-face without traveling to the facility.

  • Conducted through facility-issued tablets or designated video visiting stations within the housing unit.
  • Must be scheduled in advance through the BOP's approved scheduling system.
  • Subject to institutional availability — sessions may be limited during lockdowns, counts, or high-demand periods.
  • Visitors must be on the inmate's approved visiting list to participate in video visits.
  • Video visits are monitored and recorded, similar to phone calls.

Availability Note

Video visiting availability varies by facility and may change based on institutional needs. Contact FCC Tucson directly to confirm whether video visiting is currently offered and how to schedule a session.

Stories from FCC Tucson

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Frequently Asked Questions

Specific visiting hours for FCC Tucson are not currently available in facility data. Generally, minimum-security federal facilities offer weekend and holiday visiting, typically on Saturdays, Sundays, and federal holidays. Contact the facility at 520-574-7100 to confirm current visiting schedules and procedures.
All visitors must be on the inmate's approved visiting list and complete a background check through the BOP. Submit a visitor application (BP-632) that includes personal information and passes a background investigation. The approval process typically takes 2-4 weeks, and visitors must bring valid government-issued identification.
Inmates can communicate through monitored phone calls, the TRULINCS email system, and traditional mail. Phone calls are typically allowed during designated hours and require approved phone numbers. Email through TRULINCS allows electronic messaging with approved contacts for a small fee per message.
Send money through the BOP's online system at www.moneygram.com, by calling 1-800-634-3422, or through postal money orders sent to the facility. Include the inmate's full name and registration number on all transactions. Electronic transfers are typically processed faster than mailed money orders.
Generally, inmates can only receive approved books, magazines, and newspapers directly from publishers or approved vendors. Personal packages from family members are typically not permitted except in special circumstances. Contact the facility's mailroom for specific policies on permissible mail items.
No, FCC Tucson does not offer the Residential Drug Abuse Program (RDAP) according to available facility data. Inmates needing RDAP may need to transfer to facilities that offer this program, which can provide up to one year of sentence reduction upon completion.
While specific work programs at FCC Tucson are not detailed in available data, minimum-security federal facilities typically offer various work assignments including food service, maintenance, landscaping, and administrative duties. These programs help inmates develop job skills and earn modest wages for commissary purchases.
The medical care level at FCC Tucson is not specifically detailed in available data. Federal facilities provide basic medical, dental, and mental health services according to BOP standards. Inmates with serious medical conditions may be transferred to medical facilities if specialized care is needed.
The commissary allows inmates to purchase approved food items, hygiene products, electronics, and other personal items using funds from their institutional account. Shopping is typically done on scheduled days based on housing unit assignments, with spending limits that vary by security level and individual circumstances.
Daily life at minimum-security facilities involves structured schedules with work assignments, meals, recreation time, and educational programs. Inmates typically have more freedom of movement within the facility compared to higher-security institutions and may participate in community work programs or furloughs as they near release.
While specific educational programs at FCC Tucson are not detailed in available data, federal facilities typically offer GED preparation, adult literacy programs, vocational training, and college courses. These programs help inmates develop skills for successful reentry into society upon release.
Inmates may request transfers to facilities closer to home or for program participation, but transfers are granted based on security level, bed space availability, and BOP operational needs. The process can take several months, and there's no guarantee that transfer requests will be approved.
Families should begin release planning early, including securing housing, employment opportunities, and community support systems. The facility's case management team works with inmates on release preparation, including halfway house placements and home confinement opportunities for eligible inmates during the final months of their sentence.
Prison Professors offers comprehensive preparation services including self-surrender coaching, family support guidance, and strategic planning for making the most of time in custody. Their resources help individuals understand BOP policies, develop personal improvement plans, and prepare for successful reintegration into society.

Have more questions about FCC Tucson? Contact us and we'll do our best to help.