Indiana
Indiana Warrant Search: How to Check If You Have a Warrant (2026)

Wondering if you have an active warrant in Indiana? Indiana runs one of the stronger self-check tools among US states: a free, statewide court-record portal you can search by name from home. Here's how to use it correctly, what its limits are, and what else to check if it doesn't give you a clear answer.
Information last verified on 2026-07-15. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
Arrest Warrants vs. Bench Warrants in Indiana
An arrest warrant is issued when police present a judge with evidence of probable cause that you committed a crime, and it authorizes officers to take you into custody wherever you're found. A bench warrant, more common in everyday situations, is issued directly by a judge, usually because someone missed a court date, failed to pay a fine, or violated bail or probation conditions. Bench warrants typically do not trigger an active manhunt. They sit on file until you're encountered another way, such as during a traffic stop.
Both are different from a search warrant, which authorizes police to search a specific place, like a home or vehicle, and has nothing to do with whether a warrant exists for a person. If you're trying to find out whether you personally have a warrant, you're asking about an arrest or bench warrant, not a search warrant.
How to Check for a Warrant in Indiana
MyCase: Indiana's Statewide Case Search (Free)

MyCase, officially called Odyssey Public Access and found at public.courts.in.gov/mycase (also reachable at mycase.in.gov), is operated by the Office of Judicial Administration under the Indiana Supreme Court. It's a free, statewide tool, and Indiana's own help page states plainly that "anyone may search mycase.in.gov for public (non-confidential) case information." No sign-up is required for a basic search; just search by party name.
The catch is coverage. MyCase only pulls from courts that use Indiana's Odyssey case management system, which the state describes as "most courts across the state," not literally every one. If a particular county court hasn't moved to Odyssey, its cases, and any warrants tied to them, won't show up in MyCase at all. Indiana's courts website publishes a list of which courts participate, which is worth checking if you're searching based on a case from a specific county.
MyCase's terms of use are also explicit that the information provided "is not to be considered or used as an official court record and may contain errors or omissions," and that an official record has to come directly from the court that maintains it. Treat a MyCase search as a strong, genuinely useful first check, not a certified final answer.
The Orange "W" Marker
Watch out: Several third-party legal and consumer sites report that MyCase displays a small orange "W" next to a case number specifically to flag an active warrant, and that clicking into the case details will show which party the warrant applies to. This is a widely repeated, plausible detail, but it does not appear on Indiana's own official MyCase help documentation, so it should be treated as commonly reported rather than an officially confirmed feature. Either way, the more reliable approach is to open the case itself and read the actual case status and entries rather than relying on a color-coded icon alone.
County Clerk of Court and Sheriff (Backup Option)
If MyCase doesn't return a result, or if the county court you're concerned about doesn't use Odyssey, the next step is to contact the Clerk of Court in the county where the case or warrant would have been filed. Many county Sheriff's Offices in Indiana also maintain free public warrant terminals or will confirm status by phone. Have your full legal name and date of birth ready either way.
Scam Warning: Fake Warrant Calls
The Federal Trade Commission and multiple U.S. District Courts have issued active, ongoing warnings about a phone scam in which a caller impersonates a sheriff's deputy, court officer, or U.S. Marshal, claims you missed jury duty or have an active warrant, and demands immediate payment by gift card, wire transfer, cryptocurrency, or a payment app to avoid arrest. Scammers can spoof caller ID so the number looks like it's coming from a real Indiana courthouse or sheriff's office, and they sometimes already have personal details like your name and address to sound convincing.
Real Indiana law enforcement does not call demanding immediate payment to cancel a warrant, and does not text or email you an arrest warrant. If a warrant is genuinely active, officers typically make contact in person or by mail, not through a payment-demanding phone call. If you get a call like this, hang up, do not call the number back, and independently look up the phone number for your county Clerk of Court or Sheriff's Office yourself to verify.
Paid commercial background-check and "people search" websites are generally legal, but they are not necessary for checking your own warrant status. In 2023, the FTC took enforcement action against two major background-check companies, resulting in a $5.8 million penalty, for marketing reports as highly accurate while doing little to verify the underlying data. MyCase and your county Clerk of Court are the same records these paid sites pull from, just free and more current.
What to Do If You Have a Warrant
If you find out you have an active warrant in Indiana, talk to a criminal defense attorney before doing anything else. Walking into a courthouse or Sheriff's Office unrepresented is rarely the best first move.
Under Indiana law, failing to appear in court after being released on bail is itself a separate criminal offense, a Class A misdemeanor that can be elevated to a Level 6 felony if the original charge was a felony. That's part of why acting through an attorney matters. An attorney will typically start by filing a motion asking the court to recall the warrant, and Indiana judges weigh factors like the nature of the original charge, how long the warrant has been active, your criminal record, and your past behavior in court when deciding whether to grant it. If that motion is denied, an attorney's next step is often a combined bond review and scheduled warrant surrender, which is generally treated more favorably by a court than an unplanned arrest during a traffic stop or at your home.
It's also worth knowing that warrants generally do not expire. An Indiana arrest or bench warrant typically remains active indefinitely until you're arrested, you surrender, or a judge formally recalls it. Waiting rarely makes the situation better and often makes it worse, since the warrant can surface unexpectedly at a traffic stop or during an unrelated encounter with police.
Frequently asked questions

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Disclaimer
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws and court procedures change, and warrant-search tools and their coverage can change without notice. If you believe you have an active warrant in Indiana, consult a licensed Indiana criminal defense attorney about your specific situation before taking any action.

Last updated: 2026-07-15.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a free way to check for a warrant in Indiana?
Yes. MyCase (Odyssey Public Access) at mycase.in.gov lets you search Indiana court records statewide by name for free, with no registration required.
Does MyCase cover every county in Indiana?
No. MyCase only includes courts that use the state's Odyssey case management system, which is most, but not all, Indiana courts. If a county court hasn't adopted Odyssey, its cases won't appear in MyCase.
What does the orange 'W' mean in MyCase?
It's widely reported by third-party legal sites as a marker for an active warrant on a case, though this specific detail isn't confirmed on Indiana's own official MyCase help pages. Open the case details to read the actual status rather than relying on the icon alone.
Is a MyCase search result an official record?
No. MyCase's own terms of use state its information is not an official court record and may contain errors. For a certified answer, contact the Clerk of Court in the relevant county directly.
What happens if I miss a court date in Indiana?
A judge can issue a bench warrant, and separately, knowingly failing to appear after being released on bail is its own criminal offense under Indiana law, a Class A misdemeanor that can become a Level 6 felony if the underlying charge was a felony.
Do Indiana warrants expire?
No. Arrest and bench warrants in Indiana generally remain active indefinitely until you're arrested, you surrender, or a judge formally recalls the warrant.
Someone called saying I have a warrant and demanded payment to cancel it. Is that real?
Almost certainly not. This matches a well-documented scam pattern the FTC and federal courts have repeatedly warned about. Real law enforcement does not call demanding immediate payment to cancel a warrant. Hang up and verify independently by calling your county Clerk of Court or Sheriff's Office using a number you look up yourself.
Can I use this to check if someone else has a warrant?
This guide is written for checking your own warrant status. Indiana courts and sheriffs have their own rules about third-party lookups, and using warrant-search tools to screen another person, such as a tenant or employee, raises separate legal considerations under federal background-check law.
Facing a warrant, DUI, or criminal charge in Indiana? Get a free case review
An active warrant or a criminal charge like DUI puts your freedom, license, and record at risk, and deadlines to act, like challenging a license suspension or resolving a warrant before an arrest, can be just days away. Get a free, confidential review from a Indiana criminal defense attorney. Acting quickly protects your options.
Sources and References
- MyCase (Odyssey Public Access), Indiana's official statewide free case search(public.courts.in.gov).gov
- Indiana Judicial Branch, Searching MyCase (official help page)(in.gov).gov
- Indiana Judicial Branch, Odyssey Public Access (MyCase) Terms of Use(in.gov).gov
- Indiana Judicial Branch, list of courts using Odyssey and MyCase(in.gov).gov
- Indiana Code 35-44.1-2-9, Failure to Appear(iga.in.gov).gov
- FTC Consumer Alert: Ignore calls, texts, and emails threatening to arrest you for missing jury duty(consumer.ftc.gov).gov