Search Tucson White Pages

Tucson white pages help you find people in Arizona's second largest city. You can look up names, addresses, and phone numbers using public records. The city has its own court and police records. Pima County handles property and voter files for Tucson residents. Both the city and county have online search tools. Most basic searches are free. This guide covers how to access Tucson white pages data and where to look for different record types in the city and Pima County.

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Tucson Quick Facts

545K+ Population
Pima County
Free Basic Searches
Online Access Available

Tucson City Court Records

Tucson City Court handles municipal cases within city limits. This includes traffic tickets, misdemeanors, and city code violations. If someone had a case in city court, you can search for it. The court keeps records of all cases filed there. This is a good place to start if you need to find out about minor offenses in Tucson.

The Tucson City Court website has info on how to access records. You can call (520) 791-4216 to ask about a case or request records by phone. The court charges $17 for a research and locate fee. Copy fees are $0.50 per page. Most requests take a few days to process. You can pick up copies in person or have them mailed to you.

The court offers an online defendant search tool. You can look up people with cases in the system. Enter a name and see what matches come up. The search shows case numbers, charges, and hearing dates. This helps when you need to check if someone has a pending case or past violations in Tucson. The tool is free to use. You only pay if you want official copies of court documents.

Tucson City Court defendant search database for white pages lookups

Note: City court handles minor cases only. Felonies and major civil cases go to Pima County Superior Court instead.

Tucson Public Records Requests

The City of Tucson keeps many records that can help with white pages searches. You can request records from most city departments. The City Clerk handles general public records requests. They track who asked for what and make sure you get a response in a timely way.

Start at the Tucson City Clerk public records page to learn what is available. The city uses the Hyland Cloud system for record requests. You can submit a request through the online records portal. Fill out the form with what you need and your contact info. Staff will email you when the records are ready. Most requests get a response within a week or so.

City records can include things like permits, business licenses, city employee info, and more. Not everything helps with a people search, but some records do. For example, if someone got a business license in Tucson, that record would show their name and address. Building permits tied to a property can show who owns it or who did work there.

Tucson Police Records

The Tucson Police Department has its own records unit. They handle incident reports, accident reports, and other police documents. If someone was involved in a police matter in Tucson, the report would be here. This is separate from court records. Police records show what happened. Court records show what legal action followed.

You can request Tucson police records through the Tucson Police Department website. Paper copies cost $5.00 plus $0.25 per page after the first 15 pages. Video records like body camera footage cost $44 per hour of footage. These fees help cover the staff time to find and copy the records you need.

Processing times vary. Simple requests may take just a few days. Complex requests with lots of video or many reports can take weeks. The records unit works through requests in the order they come in. If you need something fast, call ahead and ask about rush options. Some records have restrictions. Ongoing investigation files may not be released until the case closes. Juvenile records are not public.

Note: For arrests and bookings, check the Pima County Sheriff inmate search instead of city police records.

Pima County Records for Tucson

Tucson sits in Pima County. The county handles many records that city offices do not keep. Property deeds, voter rolls, and Superior Court cases all go through county offices. For a full white pages search on someone in Tucson, you should check both city and county sources. The county records often have more depth than what city offices can offer.

The Pima County Recorder keeps property records. You can search documents recorded since 1982 online. This includes deeds, liens, and other property filings. If you want to know who owns a house in Tucson, start here. The recorder office is at 240 N Stone Avenue in Tucson. Call (520) 724-4350 for help with searches.

The Pima County Assessor has property owner data too. Their parcel search tool shows current owners, mailing addresses, and property values. This is useful for white pages searches because it shows where people live and what they own. The assessor phone number is (520) 724-8630.

For court cases beyond city court, use the Pima County Superior Court public records portal. Felony cases, large civil suits, family cases like divorce, and probate all go through Superior Court. Search by name to find cases. Copy fees are $0.50 per page. Certified copies cost $30 each. Call the Clerk of Court at (520) 724-3200 if you need help finding records.

Tucson Voter Records

Voter registration is one of the best tools for finding people. Tucson residents who vote are on file with Pima County. The voter list has names, addresses, party choice, and voting history. You can use this data to find current addresses for many people in Tucson.

Arizona law controls what voter data is public. Under ARS 16-168, you can see the full name, party, registration date, residence address, mailing address, zip code, phone number, birth year, job type, and voting history. Some things stay private. The full birth date, social security number, driver license number, signature, and email are all protected. Using voter data for commercial sales or bad acts is a class 6 felony.

Check your own voter status at my.arizona.vote. For broader searches, contact the Pima County Recorder. They can tell you how to request voter list data. Most people who are of voting age and live at a stable address are registered to vote. This makes voter records a strong source for white pages searches in Tucson.

How to Search Tucson White Pages

There are several ways to find people in Tucson. Online tools are fastest. You can search from home any time of day. In-person visits to city or county offices work well when you need certified copies or help with a tricky search. Mail requests are an option too, though they take longer.

The type of record you need guides where to look. Here is a quick breakdown:

  • Traffic tickets and misdemeanors: Tucson City Court
  • Police reports and incidents: Tucson Police Department
  • Property ownership: Pima County Recorder or Assessor
  • Felonies and civil suits: Pima County Superior Court
  • Voter info and addresses: Pima County Recorder
  • Current jail inmates: Pima County Sheriff

Most basic searches are free in Tucson and Pima County. You pay when you want copies of documents. Online portals let you search first, then decide if you need to order anything. Fees are low for most records. The $17 research fee at city court is one of the higher costs. Standard page copies run between $0.25 and $0.50 across most offices.

Third-party search services can also help. Tucson uses the Hyland Cloud system for city records. Pima County uses Tyler Technologies for recorder searches. Both systems are easy to use once you get the hang of them. Staff at city and county offices can guide you if you get stuck or do not know where to look for a certain record type.

Nearby Arizona Cities

Tucson is surrounded by smaller cities in Pima County. People often move between these areas. If your Tucson search comes up empty, the person may live in a nearby town now. These cities use the same Pima County records for property and court matters, but may have their own police records.

Each city has its own police department and may have municipal court records too. Marana, Oro Valley, and Sahuarita all have online record request systems. Check those city pages for details on local search tools. For county-wide records like property and voter data, the Pima County offices cover all these areas the same as Tucson.

Pima County White Pages

For more details on Pima County records and search tools, visit our full county guide. It covers the recorder, assessor, Superior Court, Justice Court, and sheriff databases. All of these apply to Tucson residents since the city is part of Pima County.

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