How to send mail to an inmate at Stratford Jail
To write to someone at Stratford Jail, address the envelope to the inmate's full name, c/o Stratford Jail, 30 St. Andrew St, Stratford ON N5A 1A3. Stratford Jail is a provincial jail in Stratford, Ontario, operated by Ontario's Ministry of the Solicitor General. Mail is inspected before delivery, and inmates can be transferred without notice — double-check the person is still there before you send.
Inmate mail — Stratford Jail
[Inmate's full name] c/o Stratford Jail 30 St. Andrew St Stratford ON N5A 1A3
Address verified July 2026 — double-check it against your form or notice before sending.
Mail it without printing anything
Upload your document — we print it, seal it, and deposit it with Canada Post within 24 hours on business days. $6 flat, no account needed, and you get a Confirmation of Mailing email for your records.
Key facts
- Write the inmate's full name on the first line and "c/o Stratford Jail" below it — mail without a usable inmate name is returned or destroyed.
- All incoming mail is opened and inspected for contraband; personal (non-privileged) mail can be read.
- Do not enclose cash, gift cards, postage stamps, jewellery, or anything besides paper — prohibited enclosures are seized.
- Inmates are transferred between facilities without notice. Confirm the person is still at Stratford Jail before mailing, and double-check the address against Ontario's Ministry of the Solicitor General's official listing.
- Include your full return address so the person can write back — some facilities refuse mail without one.
- PostPal prints and deposits your letter with Canada Post the next business day, so you can write from anywhere without a printer or stamps.
How to mail it, step by step
- 1
Confirm the person is still at Stratford Jail
Inmates move between facilities without notice — after sentencing, for security reclassification, or for programs. Confirm during a call or visit that they are still at Stratford Jail before you send anything, and double-check the mailing address against the official Ontario listing (linked in the sources below).
- 2
Address it to the inmate, care of the facility
First line: the inmate's full name (the name they are held under, not a nickname). Second line: c/o Stratford Jail. Then the mailing address: 30 St. Andrew St, Stratford ON N5A 1A3.
- 3
Keep the contents to paper only
A letter on plain paper is always safest. No cash, stamps, gift cards, stickers, glitter, perfume, or laminated items — facilities seize prohibited enclosures and may reject the whole letter. If you want to send photos or documents, call the facility first to confirm what it accepts.
- 4
Send it without a trip to the post office
Write or upload your letter to PostPal with the address above prefilled, and we print, envelope, and deposit it with Canada Post the next business day for $6 — with your return address printed so they can write back.
Common questions
How do I address a letter to an inmate at Stratford Jail?
Put the inmate's full name on the first line, "c/o Stratford Jail" on the second line, then the facility's mailing address: 30 St. Andrew St, Stratford ON N5A 1A3. Include your own return address so they can write back.
Is mail to Stratford Jail opened and read?
Expect it to be. Correctional facilities inspect incoming mail for contraband, and non-privileged personal mail can be read under Ontario's Ministry of the Solicitor General's rules. Never include cash, gift cards, stamps, or anything besides paper — unauthorized enclosures are confiscated and can get the letter rejected.
What happens if the person has been transferred or released?
The letter will not be forwarded to you or reliably to them. Inmates are moved between facilities without notice, so confirm the person is still at Stratford Jail — ideally during a phone call or visit — before mailing anything important.
Can the inmate write back to me?
Yes. Include a complete return address on your letter. Inmates in Ontario provincial custody can send outgoing personal mail, though they may need to cover their own postage.
Can I send photos or printed documents?
Plain paper letters and standard photo prints are generally accepted; polaroids, hard objects, and anything glued, taped, or perfumed usually are not. Rules vary by facility and change — call Stratford Jail to confirm before sending anything other than a plain letter.
Sources
- https://www.ontario.ca/page/correctional-facilities
- https://www.ontario.ca/page/inmate-information-guide-adult-correctional-facilities
Addresses verified July 2026 against official sources. Always confirm on the official site before time-sensitive filings.