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

Trying to find out if you have an active warrant in Michigan? There's no free statewide website that simply answers that question, and one of the state's real public tools, ICHAT, is widely and mistakenly assumed to cover warrants when it explicitly does not. Here's what to actually check, and where the confusion comes from.
Information last verified on 2026-07-15. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
Arrest Warrants vs. Bench Warrants in Michigan
An arrest warrant is issued when a prosecutor authorizes charges and a judge finds probable cause that you committed a crime, and once it's entered into the Law Enforcement Information Network (LEIN), officers anywhere in the state can act on it. A bench warrant, by contrast, is issued directly by a judge, most often when someone misses a scheduled court hearing, doesn't pay a court-ordered fine, or violates probation. For a first missed misdemeanor hearing, Michigan law actually builds in a delay before a bench warrant issues at all, discussed below. Bench warrants typically don't trigger an active manhunt. They sit on file until you're encountered another way, such as a traffic stop.
Both are different from a search warrant, which authorizes police to search a specific place, like a home or vehicle, for evidence, and has nothing to do with whether a warrant exists for you personally. If you're asking "do I have a warrant," you're asking about an arrest or bench warrant, not a search warrant.
There's no current, comprehensive count of active warrants in Michigan specifically, and the state doesn't publish one. Nationally, the most citable estimate, from a peer-reviewed study published by the federal judiciary's own Federal Probation journal, put the number of active U.S. criminal warrants at more than 2 million, over half of them for felonies. That figure is now over a decade old, but it makes a useful point: outstanding warrants are common, not rare, and a large share trace back to missed court dates and unpaid fines rather than violent crime.
How to Check for a Warrant in Michigan
Michigan does not run one centralized, free, public database that lists every active warrant statewide. The realistic path combines a free statewide case search, direct contact with local courts and sheriffs, and an understanding of what the state's public criminal-history tool actually does and doesn't show.

MiCOURT: Michigan's Free Statewide Case Search
MiCOURT is the Michigan Supreme Court's official case-search portal. It's free, requires no account, and lets you search by party name, case number, attorney bar number, or business name across the Court of Appeals, Court of Claims, and all 57 Circuit Courts. Results show case type, filing date, party names, case status, and docket entries. It's a genuinely useful first stop, but it has real gaps: privacy rules that took effect in January 2022 removed some personal identifying details from public view, and juvenile, adoption, mental-health, and sealed cases don't appear at all. Depending on the court, some District Court (misdemeanor and traffic-level) cases may not be fully reflected either, so treat a clean MiCOURT search as a good sign, not a guarantee.
The ICHAT Trap: Why Michigan's Criminal History Tool Won't Show Your Warrant
Watch out: ICHAT (the Internet Criminal History Access Tool), Michigan State Police's real, official public records tool, is often assumed to double as a warrant search. It is not. ICHAT's database is built from Michigan conviction records, and it explicitly excludes outstanding warrants, along with federal records, other states' records, traffic records, juvenile records, and non-conviction arrests. A search that returns nothing on ICHAT tells you nothing about whether a warrant exists for you.
ICHAT costs $10 per search, requires registering an account and paying by card, and results are viewable and printable for seven days before being deleted. Under Michigan law, the first $20 in fees can be waived for qualifying low-income individuals. Use ICHAT if you want to see your Michigan conviction history, but don't use it as a warrant check.
You may also see older claims online about a general public warrant-lookup feature inside MILogin, the state's login portal for various Michigan government services. That specific claim could not be verified against any official Michigan State Police or courts.michigan.gov source, and MILogin is not a public warrant database. Don't rely on it.
County Circuit or District Court Clerk and the Sheriff's Office
If MiCOURT and ICHAT don't resolve the question, contact the Circuit or District Court Clerk, or the County Sheriff, in the county where a case or warrant might exist. Have your full legal name and date of birth ready. Some larger counties also run their own public case-search portals with more local detail than MiCOURT, including Oakland County's "Court Explorer" and Wayne County's 3rd Circuit Court public-access system.
How a Warrant Can Surface Even If You Don't Look
A Michigan warrant doesn't just sit quietly until you decide to check for it. A routine traffic stop involves an officer running your license and plates against LEIN, which can surface an outstanding warrant even for something unrelated, like a burned-out taillight. A pre-employment or housing background check is a separate legal process governed by federal law (the Fair Credit Reporting Act), but it can turn up an open warrant too, since it draws from many of the same public court records. Some travel-advice sites claim airport security checks routinely flag outstanding warrants, but that isn't confirmed for general domestic travelers; TSA's general passenger screening is built around watchlist matching, not a routine warrant check, though contact with law enforcement during secondary screening could still surface one in some circumstances.
Scam Warning: Fake Warrant Calls
The Federal Trade Commission and multiple U.S. District Courts have issued active warnings about a phone scam in which a caller poses as 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 a real Michigan courthouse or sheriff's office, and they sometimes already have your name and address to sound convincing.
Real Michigan 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, 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 Sheriff's Office or court clerk yourself to verify.
Paid commercial background-check and "people search" websites are generally legal, but you don't need one to check 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. The official Michigan sources, MiCOURT, the county clerk, or the sheriff, are the same records these paid sites pull from, just free and more current.
What to Do If You Have a Warrant
If you learn you have a warrant in Michigan, 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.

For a first missed misdemeanor court date, Michigan law (MCL 764.3) creates a rebuttable presumption that the court must wait 48 hours, excluding weekends and court holidays, before issuing a bench warrant, giving you a window to appear voluntarily, unless the underlying charge involves an assaultive crime or domestic violence. An attorney can often file a motion to recall or quash a bench warrant, particularly when the missed hearing has a documentable explanation, and arrange a court appearance without you needing to be taken into custody first. When a warrant can't simply be recalled, attorneys can sometimes arrange a scheduled, voluntary surrender coordinated with the court, which tends to be treated more favorably than an unplanned arrest.
Michigan warrants generally do not expire. They remain active until they're executed, a judge recalls or quashes them, or the underlying case is resolved another way, sometimes for years. Waiting rarely improves the situation and can make it worse, since the warrant can surface unexpectedly at a traffic stop, during an employment background check, or at another routine encounter with police.
Frequently asked questions
Related articles
Disclaimer
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws, court procedures, and the tools described here can change without notice. If you believe you have an active warrant in Michigan, consult a licensed Michigan 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 Michigan?
MiCOURT, the state's free statewide case-search portal, is a good first stop and covers party-name searches across Circuit Courts statewide. For a more complete picture, especially at the District Court level, contacting the county Circuit or District Court Clerk or the County Sheriff by phone is typically free.
Does ICHAT show whether I have a warrant?
No. ICHAT, Michigan State Police's public criminal-history tool, explicitly excludes outstanding warrant information. It only shows Michigan conviction history. A clean ICHAT result tells you nothing about warrant status.
Is there a real "MILogin warrant database"?
No verified official source confirms a general public warrant-lookup feature inside MILogin. That claim circulates online but could not be confirmed against Michigan State Police or courts.michigan.gov. Don't rely on it.
How much does ICHAT cost?
ICHAT costs $10 per name search, paid by credit or debit card after creating an account. The fee is non-refundable even if the search returns no results. The first $20 in fees can be waived for qualifying low-income individuals.
Does MiCOURT cover every Michigan court?
MiCOURT covers the Supreme Court, Court of Appeals, Court of Claims, and all 57 Circuit Courts. Some District Court cases, plus juvenile, adoption, mental-health, and sealed cases, are not fully reflected, so a clean search isn't a full guarantee.
Do Michigan warrants expire?
No. Michigan arrest and bench warrants generally remain active until they're executed, a judge recalls or quashes them, or the underlying case is resolved, regardless of how much time passes.
Someone called saying I have a warrant and demanded payment to cancel it. Is that real?
Almost certainly not. This matches a scam pattern the FTC and federal courts have repeatedly warned about. Real Michigan courts and police don't call demanding immediate payment. Hang up and verify independently by calling the sheriff's office or court clerk 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. Michigan courts and law enforcement agencies have their own rules about third-party lookups, and using warrant-search information to screen another person, such as a tenant or job applicant, is governed by separate federal background-check law.
Facing a warrant, DUI, or criminal charge in Michigan? 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 Michigan criminal defense attorney. Acting quickly protects your options.
Sources and References
- MiCOURT Case Search, Michigan Supreme Court statewide case-search portal(courts.michigan.gov).gov
- Michigan Courts, official state judiciary website(courts.michigan.gov).gov
- Michigan State Police: Criminal History Records (ICHAT)(michigan.gov).gov
- ICHAT (Internet Criminal History Access Tool) official portal(michigan.gov).gov
- Michigan Compiled Laws, MCL 764.3, failure to appear and bench warrant issuance(legislature.mi.gov).gov
- Michigan Court Rules, Chapter 6 (Criminal Procedure)(courts.michigan.gov).gov
- FTC Consumer Alert: Ignore calls, texts, and emails threatening to arrest you for missing jury duty(consumer.ftc.gov).gov
- Federal Probation (Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts): National Public Registry of Active Warrants, a policy proposal(uscourts.gov).gov