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

Wondering if you have an active warrant in Utah? You're in one of the few states where the answer is genuinely simple. Utah's Department of Public Safety runs a free, official, statewide tool that lets you search for your own name directly, no account, no fee, and no trip to a courthouse required.
Information last verified on 2026-07-15. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
Arrest Warrants vs. Bench Warrants in Utah
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, not just in one county. A bench warrant, more common for everyday situations, is issued directly by a judge, usually because someone missed a court date, failed to pay a court-ordered fine, or violated probation. Bench warrants typically do not trigger an active manhunt. They sit on file until you're encountered another way, such as during a routine 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. Utah's statewide tool, described below, covers arrest and bench warrants entered by the state's courts.
How to Check for a Warrant in Utah
Most states don't have anything close to a single, reliable, free public warrant search. There's no single national or uniform lookup either. NCIC, the FBI's national wanted-persons file, is restricted to law enforcement agencies and has no public login, and even state and local databases aren't fully synchronized with it. Against that backdrop, Utah stands out as one of the very few states that actually built the tool most people assume already exists everywhere.

warrants.utah.gov: A Real Statewide Tool
The Utah Statewide Warrants file, accessible at warrants.utah.gov (also reachable through bci.utah.gov's 'Check Your Utah Warrants' page), is run by the Department of Public Safety's Bureau of Criminal Identification. It's a genuine, free, name-based search covering felony, misdemeanor, and infraction warrants issued by courts across the state. You enter your name and date of birth, and results return details like the nature of the offense, the case number, the city, and the issuing court. There's no account to create and no fee to pay. For a personal warrant check, this should be your first stop in Utah.
The underlying data comes directly from Utah's courts, which transmit warrant information to BCI through the Utah Criminal Justice Information System (UCJIS). That means the tool reflects actual court activity rather than a separately maintained list, which is part of why it's more reliable than the curated 'most wanted' pages some other states offer instead of a real search.
What a Clean Result Doesn't Guarantee
Tip: If warrants.utah.gov comes back clean, that's a good sign, but it isn't an absolute guarantee. Not every county sheriff's office reports every warrant into the statewide system with the same speed or consistency. If you have a specific reason to think a warrant might exist in a particular county, it's worth also checking that county Sheriff's 'Most Wanted' page or calling the county Justice or District Court clerk directly for a fuller picture.
Accuracy depends on how promptly and completely each court enters and removes records, so a very recently issued or recently resolved warrant could lag behind in the database for a short period. This is a normal limitation of any database fed by dozens of separate courts, not a sign the tool itself is unreliable.
Don't Confuse It With Xchange, Utah's Paid Court Case Search
Utah's courts separately run Xchange, a statewide district-court case-search system, and it is easy to mistake for the same thing as the BCI warrant tool since both are official state resources. It is not free. A one-time or guest Xchange account requires a $10 minimum deposit, with searches charged at $0.35 each and documents at $1.00 each, deducted from that deposit. Subscription accounts cost more upfront. Xchange is useful if you want to see full case-docket details or documents, but if all you want to know is whether you have an active warrant, warrants.utah.gov already answers that for free and doesn't require you to spend money first.
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 Utah courthouse or sheriff's office, and they sometimes already have personal details like your name and address to sound convincing.
Real law enforcement in Utah 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 check warrants.utah.gov yourself or call your county Sheriff's Office using a number you look up independently.
Paid commercial background-check and 'people search' websites are generally legal, but they are not necessary for checking your own warrant status in Utah, where the official free tool already exists. 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. There's little reason to pay a third party for something Utah's own DPS gives you free and faster.
What to Do If You Have a Warrant
If warrants.utah.gov shows an active warrant under your name, talk to a criminal defense attorney before doing anything else. Walking into a Sheriff's Office or courthouse unrepresented is rarely the best first move.
An attorney can often file a motion to quash or recall the warrant, particularly for a bench warrant tied to a missed court date, if there's a documentable reason like illness or a scheduling breakdown. In many cases, an attorney can handle the initial filing without you needing to appear in person right away. When a warrant can't simply be quashed, attorneys frequently arrange a scheduled, voluntary surrender at a time coordinated with the court, which is often treated more favorably than an unplanned arrest during a traffic stop or at your home.
It's also worth knowing that warrants generally do not expire. A Utah arrest or bench warrant typically remains active indefinitely until you're arrested, you surrender, or a judge formally dismisses or quashes 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, court procedures, and warrant-search tools and their coverage can change without notice. If you believe you have an active warrant in Utah, consult a licensed Utah criminal defense attorney about your specific situation before taking any action.

Last updated: 2026-07-15.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is warrants.utah.gov really free and official?
Yes. It's run by the Utah Department of Public Safety's Bureau of Criminal Identification (BCI), and searching by name and date of birth costs nothing and requires no account.
What information do I need to search warrants.utah.gov?
You search using your name and date of birth. No account creation or payment is required.
If warrants.utah.gov shows nothing, am I definitely clear?
Very likely, but not with absolute certainty. Not every county sheriff's office reports every warrant into the statewide system with the same speed, so if you have a specific reason to suspect a warrant in a particular county, it's worth also checking that county Sheriff's page or calling the court clerk directly.
Is Xchange the same as the Utah warrant search?
No. Xchange is a separate, paid statewide court case-search system run by Utah's courts, requiring a minimum $10 deposit plus per-search and per-document fees. warrants.utah.gov, run by BCI, is the free warrant-specific tool.
What kinds of warrants does the Utah Statewide Warrants file cover?
It covers outstanding felony, misdemeanor, and infraction warrants entered by courts across Utah, transmitted through the Utah Criminal Justice Information System (UCJIS).
Do Utah warrants expire?
No. Arrest and bench warrants in Utah generally remain active indefinitely until you're arrested, you surrender, or a judge formally quashes or 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 using warrants.utah.gov or by calling your county Sheriff's Office using a number you look up yourself.
Can I use warrants.utah.gov to check if someone else has a warrant?
This guide is written for checking your own warrant status. 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 Utah? 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 Utah criminal defense attorney. Acting quickly protects your options.
Sources and References
- Check Your Utah Warrants, Utah DPS Bureau of Criminal Identification(bci.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Statewide Warrants Search(warrants.utah.gov).gov
- Xchange Fees and Subscription, Utah Courts(utcourts.gov).gov
- Utah Statewide Warrants (SWW) overview, Department of Public Safety Technology & Communications(ucjis-tac.utah.gov).gov
- FTC Consumer Alert: Ignore calls, texts, and emails threatening to arrest you for missing jury duty(consumer.ftc.gov).gov
- David M. Bierie, 'National Public Registry of Active Warrants: A Policy Proposal,' Federal Probation Vol. 79 No. 1, Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts(uscourts.gov).gov