This guide helps you find Court Records in Williamson County, Texas by using the Williamson County Records Inquiry portal and the clerk offices that keep district and county court files.
This site is independent and provides practical help, not legal advice. Use the county’s official search tools and clerk offices for current case entries, docket information, and copy request options.
Williamson County Records Inquiry
The main online starting point is the county’s public court search system. It lets you move between criminal case records, civil, family and probate case records, and multiple docket pages.
- Open search court records online and choose the record area that matches your case.
- Use the Criminal Case Records or Civil, Family & Probate Case Records options for general case lookups.
- Use the docket pages if you need a setting list for County Courts at Law, district courts, or Justice Court calendars.
- Review the case entry carefully. The county states the online information is a public service and does not guarantee accuracy, reliability, or completeness.
For pending district court matters, the public judicial records site shows court assignment and court date when a setting exists, except for cases restricted by law.
Choose the right clerk
Review District Clerk record services when you need records from the district courts. The District Clerk is the custodian of district court pleadings and papers and handles civil, family, juvenile, and criminal record requests electronically.
Review County Clerk court services when you need county court, probate, or A&B misdemeanor records. The County Clerk manages the civil courts, the probate court, and the A&B misdemeanor County Courts at Law 1-5.
Copies and certified copies
For district court records, requests for civil, family, juvenile, and criminal copies are handled electronically, and the copies can be transmitted by email.
Certified copies cannot be emailed. The District Clerk states certified copies are mailed to the address on the request form or provided at the office for a certified copy request.
If you need a filed district court document, the District Clerk also notes that filed cases are located on the Judicial Records website. For county-level court files, use the County Clerk side of the system or contact that office directly.
Dockets and public access
The county system includes County Court at Law criminal and civil dockets, family dockets, district court docket searches, and Justice Court calendars. That makes it useful when you need a current setting list instead of a full case file.
If you need to go in person, the district courts state that the Justice Center is open to the public Monday-Friday from 8:00 AM-5:00 PM. Public entry is at the corner of 4th and Martin Luther King Street, security screening applies, and recording court proceedings is prohibited.
Court records contacts
Use the clerk that matches the court level or record type you need.
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Williamson County District Clerk
Phone: (512) 943-1212
Hours: Monday through Friday 8 am to noon and 1 pm to 5 pm
Notice: Financial transactions are not accepted after 4:30 pm. -
Williamson County Clerk, 405 Martin Luther King Street, Georgetown, TX 78626-4901
Phone: (512) 943-1515
Basement - Recording & Vitals: 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. Monday - Friday
2nd Floor - Courts: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Friday
Common questions
Where do I start an online court record search?
Start with the county’s public court search portal. It separates criminal cases, civil, family and probate cases, and several docket calendars, so choose the section that matches your court and case type.
Which office handles district court records?
The District Clerk keeps the pleadings and papers for the district courts. That office handles civil, family, juvenile, and criminal record requests electronically, while county court, probate, and A&B misdemeanor matters are handled through the County Clerk side.
Can certified copies be sent by email?
No. The District Clerk says regular copies can be transmitted by email, but certified copies cannot be emailed. They are mailed to the address on the request form or requested at the office.
Why might a case entry look incomplete or be missing?
The county says its online information is offered as a public service and does not come with a warranty of accuracy, reliability, or completeness. The district courts also note that some cases are restricted by law, so contact the matching clerk if you need confirmation or a copy request.