Search Clark County Traffic Court Records

Clark County Traffic Court Records can start in the clerk office, the district court, or the superior court record system depending on the case. That matters because Clark County is one of the places where a traffic search can look simple at first and still split into more than one official office. If you are trying to find a hearing date, a docket entry, or a copy of the signed order, begin with the court name on the citation or notice. The county pages, the court directory, and the statewide case tools then give you the fastest route to the file itself.

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Clark County Traffic Court Records Overview

210 E. 13th District Court
1200 Franklin Superior Court
24/7 Odyssey Access
Mon-Fri Clerk Hours

Clark County Traffic Court Records Search

Clark County gives you several official paths for traffic records. The clerk home page says copy requests are available, family law instructions are posted for domestic case actions, and the fee schedule is available for filings. It also points users to the Odyssey Portal and the Superior Court Name Search, both of which can search cases across Washington. That makes the clerk office the first practical stop when you need to find the file instead of just a summary. The office is open Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with phone hours from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and lunch closure from noon to 1:00 p.m.

The Clark County District Court page adds an important detail. The court moved effective Monday, February 2, 2026, to 210 E. 13th Street in Vancouver. Its mission statement says the court is focused on equitable access and justice services. That matters for Clark County Traffic Court Records because district court handles traffic infractions, criminal traffic citations, misdemeanors, gross misdemeanors, civil cases below the district threshold, small claims, and name changes. If the citation is a limited-jurisdiction matter, the district court is usually the right office to check first.

Clark County Clerk Home is the source page that ties the office, the request path, and the statewide search tools together. Clark County District Court Home is the district court page to use when the matter is a traffic infraction or criminal traffic citation. Those two pages work best together because one covers the record keeper and the other covers the active court path.

Where Clark County Traffic Court Records Live

Clark County Traffic Court Records are not held in only one office. Superior Court records stay with the Clark County Clerk, while district court traffic matters stay in the limited-jurisdiction court system. The Clark County Courts Home page says the clerk maintains the record of Superior Court, and that district court handles traffic infractions, criminal traffic citations, misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors, civil matters under the district limit, small claims, and name changes. That split is the key to a clean search. If you start with the wrong court level, you may get a summary that looks useful but does not hold the signed record you need.

The Washington State Court Directory confirms the county office details and gives you a reliable cross-check. It lists Clark County Superior Court at 1200 Franklin Street in Vancouver and Clark County District Court at 210 E. 13th Street in Vancouver. The directory also lists the Clark County Clerk phone number. That is useful when you need a final check before you call or visit. The directory is often the quickest way to make sure the court name, the street address, and the office line all match the file you are chasing.

Washington State Court Directory - Clark County is especially useful when a traffic case has already moved past the citation stage. It shows the clerk, the district court, and the superior court in one place, which keeps the search tight. For Clark County Traffic Court Records, that is the right way to avoid mixing a city ticket, a district court case, and a superior court file all at once.

The first image below comes from the Clark County Clerk Home page at Clark County Clerk Home. It is the clearest county visual for the office that keeps superior court records and handles copy requests.

Clark County Traffic Court Records clerk home

Use the clerk page when you need the record keeper instead of just the court location.

Clark County Traffic Court Records Requests

The Clark County Clerk page says copy requests are available if you need a document from a case, and it points users to family law instructions and protection order information as well. That is a good sign that the clerk office is the main public doorway for Clark County Traffic Court Records once you need the actual file. The page also lists the Odyssey Portal and the Superior Court Name Search, both of which can help you find a case before you ask for the copy. A good county search often starts in the portal and ends with the clerk.

The clerk also provides troubleshooting for common e-file issues. That is useful if the traffic matter is part of a larger superior court file or if the case was filed electronically and you need to verify what was accepted. Because the clerk office handles more than traffic alone, it helps to be specific. Give the case number, the party name, and the document name if you know it. If you do not, start with the date and the court label from the citation. That usually narrows the result enough for the clerk to help.

The second county image below comes from the Clark County Courts Home page at Clark County Courts Home. It is the best county source for the broader court structure around traffic records.

Clark County Traffic Court Records courts home

That page is useful when you need to sort district court traffic records from superior court record files.

For public traffic and record work, the district court page is also important because it handles traffic infractions and criminal traffic citations. If the case was heard there, the district court is the right place to check the active docket, hearing schedule, or online service path. If the record is a superior court file, the clerk remains the record holder. The county request path works best when you know which of those two offices owns the paper.

Clark County Traffic Court Records and Rules

Washington's traffic infraction system shapes what appears in Clark County Traffic Court Records. Under RCW 46.63.030, a notice of traffic infraction may be issued by an officer in several ways, including in person, after a crash investigation, or through automated camera detection. That is why some county records show a roadside stop and others show a mailed notice. The source of the notice changes the way the case begins, but the record still lands in the official court file.

RCW 46.63.070 gives the person 30 days to respond. That response can be a payment, a contest, or a hearing request. If you are reading a docket, that rule often explains why the file shows a mitigation hearing, a contested hearing, or an order after the deadline passed. Penalties and payment plans are also part of the record. RCW 46.63.110 covers monetary penalties, while RCW 46.63.190 covers payment plans for people who cannot pay in full right away.

RCW 46.63.120 explains that the resulting order is civil in nature and may be waived, reduced, or suspended in some cases. That matters because a Clark County traffic docket may show a civil order rather than a criminal sentence. Camera cases follow another path. RCW 46.63.220 covers automated traffic safety cameras, including the notice timeline and the limited way those infractions are processed. If the ticket is a camera case, the docket may look different from a stop by an officer, but it still belongs to the traffic court record set.

The third county image below comes from the Clark County Clerk Records page at Clark County Clerk Home. It points to the copy and search side of the county record path.

Clark County Traffic Court Records clerk records page

That page is the best fit when you need a document request rather than just a search result.

Clark County Traffic Court Records Source Images

The county images above point back to the official Clark County sources that shape the search. Each image lead-in names the source page directly so the record path stays clear.

Clark County Clerk Home is the main county page for copy requests and clerk access.

Clark County Traffic Court Records clerk home source

Use it when you need the office that keeps the superior court file.

Clark County Courts Home explains the county court split and which court handles traffic infractions.

Clark County Traffic Court Records courts home source

That page helps you tell district court traffic matters from superior court record work.

Clark County Clerk Records is the county path for copies and case record requests.

Clark County Traffic Court Records records source

That source is the cleanest fit when you need the actual document, not just the docket entry.

Help With Clark County Traffic Court Records

For a final official check, use the Washington State Court Directory at courts.wa.gov/court_dir. It gives you the superior court, the district court, and the clerk details in one place. The statewide case search at Washington State Courts case search is another good lead when the case number or court name is the only thing you have. If the file is in superior court, the clerk office is the better source for the actual document. If it is a district court traffic matter, the district court page is the better first stop.

Clark County Traffic Court Records are easiest to manage when you keep the court level in view. The clerk handles superior court records. The district court handles traffic infractions and criminal traffic citations. The court directory tells you where the offices sit now, which matters because the district court moved in 2026. If you know that split before you call, you will usually get to the right office on the first try.

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