Search Utah County Jail Mugshots

Utah County Jail Mugshots searches usually start with the sheriff roster and then move to city reports or court files if you need the full trail. Utah County has one of the most complete jail search systems in the state, so recent bookings can be easy to find if you know the name. The county also keeps the booking window short, which means timing matters. If the arrest is fresh, the photo and custody status can show up quickly. If the record is older, the request path becomes more important.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Utah County Jail Mugshots Quick Facts

30 Days Booking Photos
801-851-4200 Jail Phone
950 Security Center Capacity
GRAMA Request Route

Utah County Jail Mugshots and Roster

The sheriff portal at sheriff.utahcounty.gov is the main public starting point for Utah County Jail Mugshots. The office sits in Spanish Fork at 3075 North Main Street, and the jail side is built around the Utah County Security Center. The research says the county provides free online search by name, with multiple daily updates and a display that includes the full name, arrest date and time, booking number, physical descriptors, and charge details. That is a strong booking tool and one of the reasons the county gets used so often.

The county also says mugshots are displayed online for only 30 days following booking. That time limit is important. If the photo is fresh, you may see it right on the roster. If not, the photo may already have fallen out of public view even though the booking record still exists. The county sheriff page at Utah County Sheriff is the right place to check first, because it gives you the booking side before you move to a report or court file.

The sheriff page at sheriff.utahcounty.gov is the best first screen for a live Utah County booking search.

Utah County Jail Mugshots sheriff portal screenshot

That screenshot shows the county booking side that sits behind the public roster and the 30 day photo window.

How to Search Utah County Jail Mugshots

Start with the full legal name and any booking date you know. The county roster is built for recent custody checks, so a narrow search works better than a broad one. If the person was arrested in Provo, Orem, Lehi, or another Utah County city, you may also want the city report that led to the booking. That city record can explain the stop, the call, or the case number that the jail roster does not show. Utah County Jail Mugshots searches are strongest when the city and county records are used together.

The county also keeps a public warrant search line and email, which helps when the search turns into a custody or warrant question. The county is one of the few places in Utah where the public jail display is detailed enough to answer a lot of basic questions on its own. If the booking is older than 30 days, though, expect the search to shift into GRAMA or the court system.

  • Full name of the person
  • Approximate arrest date
  • City where the arrest happened
  • Booking number or court date if known
  • Contact details for follow-up

Note: Utah County Jail Mugshots searches often start with the roster and end with a city report or court file if the photo has aged out of the 30 day window.

Utah County Jail Mugshots Requests

Utah County's GRAMA process covers booking records, arrest logs, and initial contact reports. The research says the process can be done online, in person, or in writing, with 10 business days for standard requests and 5 days for media requests. Copies cost 10 cents per page, staff time costs $22 per hour after the first 15 minutes, and inspection is free. That makes the county request route fairly straightforward once you know which record you need. Medical records, active investigations, victim information, and juvenile records remain restricted.

Provo and Orem are especially important here. Provo Police records are available through the police GRAMA request form online, and Orem Police records are available through their own GRAMA request process. Both cities transfer arrests to Utah County Jail for booking, which means the city report and the county booking record sit side by side in the trail. Utah County Jail Mugshots searches often need both, especially when the booking photo is no longer public.

The county GRAMA rules and the city police requests work best when the request says whether you need the report, the booking record, or both.

The county booking records stay useful even after the photo drops off the public view.

Utah County Jail Mugshots and State Tools

When the county booking screen does not give you enough, Utah state tools finish the search. Utah Courts XChange at utcourts.gov/en/court-records-publications/records/xchange.html helps you follow the court side after booking. The Bureau of Criminal Identification at bci.utah.gov/criminal-records is the right state office for a personal criminal history check. The statewide warrant search at secure.utah.gov/warrants is useful when the question moves from booking to warrant status. The Utah Department of Corrections offender search at corrections.utah.gov/offender-search helps if the person leaves county jail and enters state custody.

Utah County Jail Mugshots Utah Courts XChange screenshot

That state court screen is the best backup when the county booking has already turned into a court case.

The state GRAMA forms page at archives.utah.gov/rim/forms/forms-grama.html is also useful if the county wants a written request with more detail.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Utah County Jail Mugshots and Nearby Cities

Utah County is a city-heavy county, so the arrest trail often starts in one city and ends in another office. Provo, Orem, Lehi, American Fork, Saratoga Springs, and Springville all connect back to the county jail in some way. That is why the county page stays useful even after you find the city police record. The city report explains the arrest. The county roster confirms custody. The state tools help when the record has moved on.

If the city page gives you only part of the story, the county roster and the court file usually finish it.