Utah Court Dockets by City
Many cities in Utah operate their own justice courts, which maintain separate court docket records for cases filed within city limits. Utah justice courts handle Class B and C misdemeanors, infractions, traffic violations, and small claims cases. These are among the most common reasons a person needs to search a city-level court docket in Utah. Cases involving felonies or larger civil disputes are filed at the county district court rather than the city justice court.
Justice court docket records in Utah are searchable through the same XChange system used for district courts. Most participating city justice courts feed their case data into XChange, making it possible to search across multiple courts from one place. Some smaller city courts may have limited XChange participation, in which case you would contact the court directly to request records.
Not every Utah city operates its own justice court. Smaller communities often rely on the county district court or a neighboring city's court to handle local cases. When a city does not maintain a separate court, docket records for cases arising in that city will be found at the county courthouse. Each city page linked below explains which court handles cases for that municipality and how to search those court docket records.
City justice court dockets cover a high volume of traffic and minor criminal matters. If you received a citation in a Utah city, the court docket for your case will almost always be at the city justice court rather than the county district court. The city name on your citation or summons will point you to the right court. You can confirm the correct court by searching the case number through XChange or by calling the city directly.
Select a city below to find local justice court contact information, courthouse addresses, and guidance on searching court docket records for cases filed in that city.
Note: Court docket records at city justice courts follow the same public access rules as district court records under GRAMA, Utah Code Title 63G Chapter 2, and are generally open to the public upon request.