The Jewish cemetery in Jadów is located about one and a half kilometres west of the market, in a wood near the peat bog reserve "Śliże". The former borders of the necropolis are clearly visible thanks to the preserved rampart of approximately 50 metres times 150 metres, with an entry from the eastern side.
In the area of the cemetery, about one hundred whole or partial gravestones have been preserved, with no more than twenty matzevot having survived in one piece. In the eastern part of the cemetery, which is close to the entry, granite gravestones predominate with simple inscriptions, almost totally deprived of bas-reliefs in finials. At the western end of the necropolis, there are several tombs and a dozen or so fragments of matzevot made of sandstone. On rather small pieces of monuments, one can see single Hebrew letters and elements of ornaments typical of the Jewish sepulchral art. Despite the damages, the arrangement of gravestones described above makes it possible to notice a division between an old and new part of the cemetery.
The central point of the necropolis is a place where once there was an old common grave of approximately six hundred Jews, killed by the Germans during liquidation of the ghetto in 1942. According to the information we have obtained, bodies of the victims were dug out and burnt in the vicinity of Węgrów still at the war time, which was ordered by the Germans. The contours of the grave are marked with a low wall made of concrete plates. Inside, there a few moss-covered granite matzevot and two damaged symbolic gravestones bearing traces of plundering. On one of them, there is a plaque with an inscription: "Berta and Rubin Berensztejn. To the memory of my parents murdered by the Nazis in 1942 ".
The cemetery may be reached on the route from Jadów to Tłuszcz. About 150 metres after the fork of roads towards Nowinki and Sulejów there is a small sandy bay on the left. At the turn of 2007, a matzewa-styled sign was placed here to indicate the necropolis. One should turn left and go through the wood aslant to the right, and after about fifty meters, the first gravestones can be seen.
