Find Yakima County Traffic Court Records

Yakima County Traffic Court Records help you track a citation, a hearing, or a county court file without guessing which office owns the record. Yakima County has a strong clerk office, a district court office, and state search tools that work together when you need a case number or a copy path. The right desk depends on whether the matter started in district court, moved to superior court, or belongs to a city court inside the county. Start with the court name, then use the county directory and the portal to line up the office that can show the record.

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Yakima County Traffic Court Records quick facts

128 North 2nd Street
Room 202 Clerk of Superior Court
Room 104 District Court
Public Court Records

Yakima County Traffic Court Records Search

The Yakima County Clerk of Superior Court is located at 128 N 2nd Street, Room 202, Yakima, WA 98901, with phone number (509) 574-1430. The clerk keeps the superior court record and can help with in-person, mail, or electronic requests depending on the file. The official page at Yakima County Clerk of Superior Court is the best starting point when a county traffic case has moved beyond a simple citation. It gives you the office name, the address, and the way the record request is supposed to work.

The county portal is the next useful step. records.courts.wa.gov gives basic case index information for Yakima County Superior Court, and the statewide Odyssey Portal helps when you need to search by party name, case number, or filing date. Those tools matter because a county file may show only part of the story in one place. If the portal gives you the index but not the full image, the clerk office is still the office that can finish the request.

The first image below comes from the clerk page and matches the office that owns the Yakima County superior court record. It is the right visual cue when you need a county file instead of a city ticket. Yakima County Clerk of Superior Court is the official source for that clerk office.

Yakima County Traffic Court Records at the clerk of superior court

Use the clerk page when you need the office that maintains the file, the copy path, or the contact line for a superior court matter. It is the cleanest county starting point.

Where Yakima County Traffic Court Records Go

Yakima County Traffic Court Records split across more than one office. The district court at 128 N 2nd Street, Room 104, Yakima, WA 98901, handles misdemeanors, civil cases up to $100,000, protection orders, small claims up to $10,000, and traffic infractions. The district court page at Yakima County District Court gives the court's record access route, online payment options, and hearing scheduling tools. That makes it the better fit when the citation stayed at the district level instead of moving to the superior court clerk.

The county directory and state search tools help when the file could belong to more than one court. The Washington State Court Directory at courts.wa.gov/court_dir is the safest cross-check when you need the court name, address, or phone number before you call. Yakima County also has municipal courts in Yakima, Union Gap, Selah, Toppenish, Wapato, Moxee, and Zillah, and those courts handle city ordinance violations and traffic infractions inside city limits. That means a county search can still point you toward a city office if the ticket began in one of those places.

The office split is the key point. Superior court files stay with the clerk, district court traffic matters stay with the district office, and city traffic files can stay with the municipal court. That does not make the search hard, but it does mean you need the court name before you ask for the file. The county portal can usually show that early in the search.

For older or less obvious files, the county court directory and the portal are still the fastest way to get back on track. They help you avoid a county-wide guess when the real answer is tied to a single office and a single docket.

Yakima County Traffic Court Records and Rules

The Washington traffic code explains the structure of Yakima County Traffic Court Records. RCW 46.63.030 covers the notice of traffic infraction, and RCW 46.63.070 covers the response and hearing path. Those sections matter because the docket may show a contest, a mitigation hearing, or a missed deadline. If you see one of those notes, it usually means the case moved through a formal step and the file now reflects that history.

The penalty and payment sections also shape the record. RCW 46.63.110 covers monetary penalties, while RCW 46.63.190 covers payment plans. That is useful when a county docket shows a balance but the matter is not really disputed anymore. The court may have already entered an order and then set the payment schedule. Reading the order and the payment note together gives you the real case status.

Camera-based cases can look different. RCW 46.63.220 covers automated traffic safety cameras, which means a record may begin with a mailed notice rather than a roadside stop. That can change the feel of the file, but it does not change the need to use the right court office. The first docket line usually tells you whether the ticket came from a camera or from a traditional stop.

The county clerk page also notes that some record requests depend on the record type and date of the case. That matters because Yakima County records are not all handled the same way. A recent filing may be visible in the portal, while an older file may need a direct request from the clerk. That is normal and helps explain why the search sometimes moves from the screen to the clerk desk.

Yakima County Traffic Court Records Copies

When you need a copy, Yakima County Traffic Court Records can usually be requested from the clerk or through the district court, depending on the court of record. The clerk page says court records may be requested in person, by mail, or electronically depending on the record type and date of the case. That gives you a direct path for superior court files. If the file is a district court traffic matter, the district court page gives the record and hearing path for that office.

The clerk page also gives the office hours, which helps when you need to make a trip instead of using the portal. The county portal and the statewide Odyssey Portal are good first checks before you ask for a copy, because they can show you the case name, date, and court layer. That is especially helpful when the file is older and the office wants the request narrowed before it starts searching.

The district court page is also useful when you need forms or online payment options tied to a live traffic case. It keeps the request on the record side of the work, which is where the traffic file belongs. If the portal says the case is in district court, the district office is the better copy path. If it points to superior court, the clerk is the right place to go.

That split keeps the request clean. Use the portal to identify the court, use the directory to confirm the office, and then ask for the copy from the office that actually owns the file. That is the quickest route through Yakima County Traffic Court Records.

Yakima County Traffic Court Records Help

If the county search still feels fuzzy, go back to the court name and the case type. Yakima County Traffic Court Records are easier to manage when you remember that superior court, district court, and city courts each keep their own layer of the record. The state court directory and the county portals are the best cross-checks when the search results do not line up on the first pass.

Older or harder-to-find files may also lead you to the Washington State Digital Archives. That can help when the county portal only shows index data or when you need a historical record image. For driver-related questions that are separate from the court file, the Washington State Department of Licensing at dol.wa.gov is the separate state office. The court file itself still belongs with the clerk or district court, so keep the office split clear while you search.

Yakima County is a good example of a simple search rule. Start with the court that issued the notice, use the portal to confirm the layer, and then ask the office that owns the record. That is the fastest way to get Yakima County Traffic Court Records without bouncing across the wrong desk.

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