Search Salt Lake City Jail Roster

Salt Lake City jail roster searches usually begin with the Salt Lake County inmate lookup and the city police records desk. A booking in Salt Lake City can move fast, so the right path depends on whether you need a current custody check, a police report, or a jail docket. This page brings those Salt Lake City jail roster tools together in one place. Use it to find the right office, the right form, and the right search path without chasing the wrong department first.

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Salt Lake City Jail Roster Quick Facts

4-12 Hours Typical Posting Delay
2 Offices Key Search Paths
10 Days GRAMA Response
1 County Jail Hub

Salt Lake City Jail Roster Basics

Salt Lake City does not keep the jail itself. Salt Lake County does. That matters because the public roster you need is the Salt Lake County Metro Jail lookup, not a city jail list. The county tool shows name, booking date, booking number, charges, bail, housing, and court dates. Research notes that the record often appears online within 4 to 12 hours after arrest. That is fast, but not instant. If you search too early, you may miss a fresh booking.

The county roster is useful because it gives a live custody picture. The city police records desk is useful because it gives report and request access. Together, they cover the main Salt Lake City jail roster needs. The city page handles GRAMA requests for police records, while the county page handles inmate lookup and jail dockets. When the issue is a booking, use the county search first. When the issue is an incident report tied to that booking, use the police records route next.

Salt Lake City users should also know that the Pioneer Precinct does not accept records requests. The correct address for records work is the main police department at 475 South 300 East. That saves time. It also keeps the request in the right queue.

Salt Lake City Jail Roster Search

The county inmate lookup is the fastest way to check current custody. It is available at the Salt Lake County inmate lookup and through the jail dockets page at Salt Lake County jail dockets and rosters. The sheriff corrections page at slco.org/sheriff/corrections links the broader jail and custody resources. If you know the booking number, permanent number, or state ID, the search is easier. If you only know a name, the tool still helps.

Salt Lake County is one of the most detailed public jail rosters in Utah. It does not publish mugshots online, but it does show many booking facts. Those facts matter in real use. A family member may need the next court date. A lawyer may need the charge list. A victim may need custody status. A caller may only need to know whether the person is still in the jail. One search tool can answer all of those questions, but not all at once every time.

If you are starting from a city arrest report, tie the search back to the county jail roster. Salt Lake City officers may make the arrest, but county custody is what places the person into the jail system. That is why the city and county pages should be read together.

Lead-in from the official source: the image below comes from the Salt Lake City police records and county jail roster resources listed in the research, including the county jail rosters page.

Salt Lake City jail roster resource

This image supports the Salt Lake City jail roster workflow. It sits with the records and custody tools that matter most here.

Salt Lake City Jail Roster Records

The Salt Lake City Police Department records division handles local records requests. The main office is at 475 South 300 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84111, with a mailing address of P.O. Box 145497, Salt Lake City, Utah 84114-5497. The records desk is open Monday through Friday from noon to 4 p.m. The Public Safety Building lobby is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The same building also handles livescan fingerprinting, but records requests are not accepted at the Pioneer Precinct. Those details matter if you are trying to get the paperwork tied to a Salt Lake City jail roster entry.

The GRAMA portal is at Salt Lake City police GRAMA records request. The city says written requests are usually answered in 10 business days, with a 5-day media track. The accepted ID list includes a driver license, US ID card, passport, visa, permanent resident card, concealed weapon permit, or military ID. A driver privilege card alone is not enough. That is a small rule, but it matters when someone drives across town to ask for records and gets turned away.

Salt Lake City also publishes an online reporting page at online police report. That page helps with select incident types such as burglary without forced entry, vandalism, thefts, fraud, hit and run crashes without injuries, and lost property. It is not the same thing as a jail roster. Still, it often sits next to the same custody question. A report may explain the arrest that later shows in the county jail lookup.

For sensitive situations, the city also points users to anonymous sexual assault reporting. The research lists the 24-hour help lines at 801-736-4356 and 801-924-0860, plus the Rape Recovery Center at 801-467-5551 and Utah hotline 1-888-421-1100. Those resources matter because some custody searches involve safety, not curiosity. A Salt Lake City jail roster search can be part of a victim-safety check, a family check, or a court follow-up. The right source depends on which of those you need.

Note: Salt Lake City Code ยง 2.64.130 sets records-request fees, and appeals go to the Chief Administrative Officer through the City Recorder within 30 days under Utah Code 63G-2-401.

Salt Lake City Jail Roster Contacts

For custody questions, Salt Lake County Metro Jail is at 3415 South 900 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84119, with jail phone 385-468-8400. The sheriff office is at 3365 South 900 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84119, and the sheriff admin line is 385-468-9898. Those contacts connect the public to the jail side of the Salt Lake City jail roster. If you need the current jail count, a release question, or a booking status update, the county line is the place to start.

Salt Lake County jail dockets and rosters are the clearest public view. They show the jail name, inmate name, booking details, charges, bail, housing, and court dates. That is enough for most people. If you need deeper court context, the Utah Courts site at utcourts.gov can help connect the jail record to the case record. A jail roster says where the person is now. A court file says what the court is doing with the case.

The county search does not need a login, and it does not charge to view basic results. That makes it the first step for a fast Salt Lake City jail roster check. Once you have the booking number or case information, the rest of the process gets easier.

Salt Lake City Jail Roster Fees

The city request rules and fee schedule are separate from the county roster. Police reports cost $15 for up to 50 pages, then 25 cents per page after that. Traffic accident reports also cost $15. Photocopies are 10 cents per page. Photographs cost $12.25. Body camera video is $33. Redaction time is $46 per hour. Staff time is $20 per hour after the first 15 minutes. Those fees come up when the jail roster question turns into a records request.

The fee structure is important because not every search ends at the public roster. A person may need a report, a photo, or a redacted incident file. In that case, the jail roster is only the starting point. The city records office and the county jail records page work in a chain. You search the roster, then you request the record that explains it.

Salt Lake City users should also remember that records may be online in the county search before a city request is processed. If the public roster already answers the question, you may not need to pay for extra copies. That is the cleanest path.

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Salt Lake City Jail Roster Help

Salt Lake City jail roster questions can overlap with legal help, reporting, and court access. The city records desk can help with the request path, but the Utah Court System at utcourts.gov is where you go when you need forms or hearing context. If the issue is inmate safety or victim notification, Vinelink is the better tool. If the issue is a state prison transfer, then the Utah Department of Corrections offender search becomes more useful than the county jail page.

That split is the core of Salt Lake City jail roster research. Use the county tool for custody. Use the city records desk for police records. Use the court site for case context. Once those three lines are clear, the rest of the search gets much easier.