Search Tucson Warrant Records

Tucson warrant records can be searched through the City Court and Pima County systems. As Arizona's second largest city, Tucson handles many warrants each year. The City Court deals with misdemeanors and city violations. Pima County Superior Court handles felonies. This guide covers how to find and resolve warrant records in Tucson.

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Tucson Quick Facts

550K+ Population
Pima County
In-Person Quash Required
2nd Largest City

Tucson Warrant Resolution

Tucson City Court has a process for people who want to resolve active warrants. The court expects Arizona residents to appear in person.

According to the Tucson City Court warrant page, defendants in Arizona should come to court in person to handle warrants. To get scheduled for a Motion to Quash hearing, go to the Public Services lobby, room 104. Hours are 8 AM to 4:30 PM, Monday through Friday. Staff will help you get on the calendar to see a judge.

Tucson City Court warrant resolution page

The court has an important warning: warrants stay in full force until a judge orders them quashed. Just showing up does not cancel the warrant. You need the judge to act. Until then, police can still arrest you on the warrant.

Tucson Defendant Search

You can search for court defendants online through the Tucson City Court website.

Use the Tucson defendant search to look up cases by name. This shows case info for people with matters in City Court. If a warrant exists, it may appear in the case details. This is a free tool anyone can use.

Tucson City Court defendant search page

The court is at 103 E. Alameda Street, Tucson, AZ 85701. Phone: (520) 791-4216. Email: TCCWeb@courts.az.gov. Hours are Monday through Friday, 8 AM to 5 PM.

Tucson Police Records

The Tucson Police Department handles requests for police records including arrest reports and incident documents.

Visit the Tucson Police records page for instructions. The address is 270 S Stone Ave, Tucson, AZ 85701-1917. Phone: 520-791-4462. Email: tpdpublicrecords@tucsonaz.gov.

Tucson Police records request page

Fees include: Paper copies cost $5 per report plus $0.25 per page after 15 pages. Email copies are $5 flat. Digital copies of 911 calls or photos on CD/DVD cost $25. Video copies run $44 per hour of video reviewed.

Note: Tucson requires in-person appearance to quash most warrants.

Clearing a Warrant in Tucson

Tucson has a more traditional approach to warrant resolution. In-person appearance is usually required.

Go to the Public Services lobby at 103 E. Alameda Street, room 104, between 8 AM and 4:30 PM on weekdays. Tell staff you have a warrant and want to be scheduled for a hearing. They will put you on the calendar to see a judge. At the hearing, explain why you missed your original court date. The judge decides whether to quash the warrant.

You may be able to pay the bond amount to clear some warrants. Ask the court about this option. Paying the bond cancels the warrant and sets a new court date. But for some cases, you must see a judge regardless.

Pima County also has programs to help with warrants. See our Pima County page for the free warrant check line and other resources.

Tucson Warrant Contacts

Here are the key contacts for warrant matters in Tucson.

Tucson City Court: 103 E. Alameda Street, Tucson, AZ 85701. Phone: (520) 791-4216. Email: TCCWeb@courts.az.gov. Hours: Monday through Friday, 8 AM to 5 PM. Tucson Police Records: 270 S Stone Ave. Phone: 520-791-4462.

Pima County Resources

Tucson is in Pima County. Felonies go through the county system.

Nearby Cities

These cities are near Tucson in Pima County.

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