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

North Carolina is one of the only states with a genuine statewide court-records portal you can search by your own name for free, and as of October 2025 it reaches all 100 counties. But there is an important catch: the specific record category that would show a warrant is still outstanding and unserved is walled off from public view. This guide explains exactly what North Carolina's eCourts Portal will and will not show you, and what to do next.
Information last verified on 2026-07-15. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
What a warrant search actually checks
When people say they want to do a "warrant search," they usually mean one of two things: an arrest warrant, which a judge issues after police present evidence establishing probable cause that a specific person committed a crime, or a bench warrant, which a judge issues directly, most often because someone missed a court date, missed a court-ordered payment, or violated a condition like probation. Neither is the same thing as 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 you personally are wanted.
There is also no single national database the public can search for either kind. The FBI's National Crime Information Center maintains a Wanted Persons File, but access is restricted to authorized criminal justice and law enforcement agencies, with no public login anywhere in the country. North Carolina fills part of that gap better than most states, with a real statewide court portal, but even that tool has a specific, documented blind spot worth understanding before you rely on it.
How to check if you have a warrant in North Carolina
Search the statewide eCourts Portal

North Carolina's eCourts Portal, at portal-nc.tylertech.cloud/Portal, is the state's official statewide court-records search. On October 13, 2025, North Carolina finished rolling the Portal out to its final 13 counties, making it the first state in the country to fully migrate statewide court operations for all case types onto one cloud-based platform. You do not need to create an account to run a basic Smart Search by name, county, and date of birth, though registering is available if you want to save cases for later.
A Smart Search on your own name returns a case summary, sometimes called a register of actions, for any matching case. That summary can show whether an order for arrest, a warrant, or a criminal summons was issued on the case, and whether it was later returned as served. For a warrant that has already been served or resolved, this is often enough to confirm the case's current status directly from your phone or computer.
Know the "Unreturned" warrant limitation
Here is the nuance that matters most. North Carolina's own Portal documentation classifies "Criminal Warrants Unreturned," meaning warrants that are still active and have not yet been served, as a restricted record category. Full access to that specific category is generally reserved for elevated-access users, such as active eWarrants users tied to law enforcement or court agencies, rather than an anonymous member of the public running a name search.
In practice, this means a still-outstanding, unserved warrant may not surface the same way in a public Portal search that an already-served one would. Behind the scenes, North Carolina's magistrates and law enforcement officers manage warrants through NCAWARE, the North Carolina Statewide Warrant Repository, a password-protected system available only to registered criminal justice officials. NCAWARE is not a separate public tool you can log into. The Portal is the public-facing front end for North Carolina courts generally, and it is not the same thing as a dedicated, guaranteed public warrant lookup.
If the Portal doesn't answer your question
If your Smart Search comes back empty, or you're not confident it captured everything, the next step is to contact the Clerk of Superior Court in the county where the case might exist. Free self-service terminals are also available at courthouses for people who want to search in person. For general technical questions about using the Portal itself, North Carolina's Administrative Office of the Courts lists ecourts@nccourts.org as a support contact, though that address is for Portal help, not legal advice.
Tip: treat a clean Portal search as reassuring, not conclusive, especially if you suspect a warrant could be very recent. To get as close to certain as possible, follow up directly with the Clerk of Superior Court in the county where a case might exist, since that office works from the same underlying records the Portal draws on.
Watch for warrant scam calls
A well-documented, currently active scam involves someone calling, texting, or emailing you claiming to be a sheriff's deputy, court officer, or U.S. Marshal, saying you missed jury duty or have an active warrant, and demanding immediate payment, by gift card, wire transfer, cryptocurrency, or an app like Zelle or Cash App, to avoid arrest. Scammers can spoof caller ID to display a real courthouse or sheriff's office number and sometimes already know your name and address, which makes the call sound more credible than it actually is.
Real North Carolina law enforcement and courts do not resolve warrants over the phone for payment, and they don't text or email an actual warrant to you. The FTC and multiple federal courts have published direct public warnings about this exact pattern. If you get a call like this, hang up, don't call back the number that contacted you, and if you want to verify anything, look up the sheriff's office or courthouse's phone number yourself rather than trusting a number the caller gives you.
You may also see ads for paid "background check" or "people search" websites promising instant warrant results. In September 2023, the FTC fined two of the largest such companies, TruthFinder and Instant Checkmate, a combined $5.8 million for marketing their reports as highly accurate while doing no real verification of the underlying data. These sites are generally legal but unnecessary for a personal warrant check, since they resell the same public records the eCourts Portal or a county Clerk of Court can already give you directly, often with a lag.
What to Do If You Have a Warrant
If you confirm a warrant, the standard advice from criminal defense attorneys is to talk to a lawyer before contacting law enforcement or a courthouse yourself. An attorney can often confirm the warrant's validity, explain what it covers, and in many cases file a motion to recall or quash it, particularly for a bench warrant tied to a missed court date you can explain, such as illness, a lack of proper notice, or a scheduling conflict. Some attorneys can also arrange a scheduled, voluntary surrender at a time coordinated with the court, which tends to go more smoothly than an unplanned arrest.
Warrants generally don't expire. A North Carolina warrant, like those in most states, remains active indefinitely until you're arrested, you surrender, or a judge formally recalls or quashes it. Ignoring one doesn't make it disappear, and because the specific unreturned-warrant category is restricted, an old warrant can sit quietly for years before it surfaces, for example during a traffic stop or an unrelated background check.
Frequently asked questions

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Disclaimer
This article provides general legal information about checking your own warrant status in North Carolina. It is not legal advice, and it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Warrant procedures, tools, and county-level practices can change; if you believe you may have an active warrant, consult a licensed North Carolina criminal defense attorney for guidance specific to your situation.

Last updated: 2026-07-15.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I really search for my own warrant in North Carolina for free?
Yes, for most case-level information. The statewide eCourts Portal at portal-nc.tylertech.cloud lets you run a Smart Search by name and date of birth without creating an account, and it covers all 100 counties as of October 2025.
Why might a warrant not show up in the eCourts Portal even though I think I have one?
North Carolina classifies the 'Criminal Warrants Unreturned' category, meaning still-active, unserved warrants, as restricted and generally reserved for elevated-access users like law enforcement. A public name search may not fully reflect a warrant that hasn't been served yet.
What is NCAWARE, and can I use it to check my own warrant status?
NCAWARE is the North Carolina Statewide Warrant Repository, the password-protected system magistrates and law enforcement officers use to create and manage warrants. It is not a public tool, and the general public cannot log into it directly.
What should I do if my eCourts Portal search comes back empty?
Treat that as a good sign but not certainty. Contact the Clerk of Superior Court in the county where a case might exist, or visit a courthouse self-service terminal, to confirm directly.
Is there a national database I can search instead?
No. NCIC, the FBI's Wanted Persons File, is restricted to authorized law enforcement and criminal justice agencies and has no public login, in North Carolina or any other state.
What's the difference between a bench warrant and an arrest warrant in North Carolina?
An arrest warrant is issued after police present a judge with evidence of probable cause that you committed a crime. A bench warrant is issued directly by a judge, most often for missing a court date, missing a court-ordered payment, or violating probation.
Do North Carolina warrants expire?
No. Like in most states, a North Carolina warrant generally stays active indefinitely until you're arrested, you surrender, or a judge recalls or quashes it.
Someone called saying I have a North Carolina warrant and demanded payment. Is that real?
Almost certainly not. Real North Carolina law enforcement does not call demanding immediate payment to cancel a warrant. Hang up, and if you want to verify, call the sheriff's office or Clerk of Court yourself using a number you look up independently.
Facing a warrant, DUI, or criminal charge in North Carolina? 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 North Carolina criminal defense attorney. Acting quickly protects your options.
Sources and References
- North Carolina Judicial Branch, eCourts overview(nccourts.gov).gov
- North Carolina eCourts Portal, statewide case search(portal-nc.tylertech.cloud).gov
- eCourts Portal Frequently Asked Questions, March 17, 2026, North Carolina Administrative Office of the Courts(nccourts.gov).gov
- North Carolina Statewide Warrant Repository (NCAWARE) Fact Sheet, North Carolina Judicial Branch(nccourts.gov).gov
- FTC Consumer Alert: Ignore calls, texts, and emails threatening to arrest you for missing jury duty(consumer.ftc.gov).gov
- Seattle Municipal Court, "Resolving a Warrant" self-help information(seattle.gov).gov