Search Salt Lake County Jail Roster

Salt Lake County jail roster research is the fastest way to confirm current custody in Utah's busiest county system. The county roster can show booking facts, housing status, charges, and court dates for people held at Metro Jail or Oxbow Jail. If you only know a name, that is still enough to start. A fuller search works even better when you add a booking number, state ID, or a rough arrest date. This page pulls the Salt Lake County jail roster, inmate lookup, and records routes into one place so you can move from a broad search to the right local office.

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Salt Lake County Jail Roster Quick Facts

248 Beds
24 Hrs Booking Delay
2 Jail Facilities
30 Results Per Group

Salt Lake County Jail Roster

Salt Lake County uses one of the most detailed jail roster tools in Utah. The public roster is split between the county corrections page, the live inmate lookup, and the jail dockets page. Search options include first and last name, booking number, permanent number, and state ID. The roster shows full name, gender, age, weight, race, hair color, eye color, arrest charges, bail amounts, booking date, case numbers, offense dates, housing location, custody status, and the next court date.

That detail is useful, but there is one clear limit. Salt Lake County does not display mugshots online. You can still verify custody and see whether a person is at Metro Jail or Oxbow Jail, yet you will not get a public photo from the roster. Booking information also appears with a delay. The county notes that data is available 24 hours after booking, and updates continue throughout the day. That is the right pace for a jail system this busy, but it means a fresh arrest may not show right away.

Roster slco.org/sheriff/corrections
Live lookup iml.slsheriff.org/IML
Jail dockets saltlakecounty.gov/sheriff/corrections/rosters
Phones 385-468-8400 jail, 385-468-9898 sheriff admin
Facilities Metro Jail, Oxbow Jail, and the sheriff office at 3365 South 900 West

Salt Lake County Jail Roster Search

Salt Lake County gives you multiple ways to search the roster, which helps when a name is common or a booking is new. Start with the live lookup if you know the exact spelling. Move to the jail dockets page if you need a wider case trail. The county corrections page is the best home base because it points to both. That is also where you confirm the local rules for the roster, the jail, and the sheriff's office.

The screenshot below comes from the county corrections page at slco.org/sheriff/corrections and shows the public path people use to reach the Salt Lake County jail roster.

Salt Lake County Jail Roster and sheriff corrections page

That page is the right starting point when you need a current custody view instead of a court file. If you are not getting a hit, try a second search with a booking number, permanent number, or state ID. Salt Lake County also supports print and export options, so the roster is practical for both a quick check and a more careful review.

If the person has already moved out of county custody, the live roster may stop helping. In that case, use the county court record, the jail docket, or a GRAMA request to follow the trail. You can also cross-check the county result with Vinelink if you need status alerts or transfer updates.

Salt Lake County GRAMA Requests

Salt Lake County jail roster data is only part of the record picture. If you need a police report, jail log, or older record that is not visible online, the GRAMA process becomes the next step. For Salt Lake City Police Department requests, use police.slc.gov/resources/grama-records-request. The Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office Records Bureau can also help at 385-468-9300, Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM.

The Utah Code that governs public records is Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2. That matters because it sets the timing, fees, and exemptions for county records. Salt Lake County uses those rules when it decides what can be released and what must stay private. The county jail roster itself is public, but not every attached file is. If you want the whole trail, ask for the specific document type instead of making the request too broad.

Unified Police Department records are another route when the incident did not come straight out of the county jail. UPD lists 5190 Heath Ave in Kearns and uses a notarized form for some requests. The fee for an incident or traffic report is $10, and the response time is 10 business days. That is useful when the arresting agency was not the sheriff or SLCPD. A narrow request is usually faster than a large one.

Note: Salt Lake County and Salt Lake City may both hold pieces of the same custody trail, so check the jail roster first and the police records office second if you need the full packet.

Salt Lake County Mail and Visits

Mail for Salt Lake County inmates goes to the Metro Jail using the prisoner's name and SO number. The mailing address is c/o Salt Lake County Metro Jail, 3415 South 900 West, South Salt Lake, Utah 84119. Use USPS. Do not send cash by mail. Legal mail must be marked as privileged or legal mail and opened in front of the prisoner. Books must come directly from a publisher, book club, or retailer, and magazines must be current issues only.

Visitation is set for 9:00 AM to 9:00 PM daily, with no visits during meal blocks from 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM and 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM. Effective April 1, 2026, walk-in visits are welcomed, though prescheduling is encouraged. You can call 385-468-8400 to reserve a visit up to six days in advance. Visits run 30 minutes, and the county limits visitors per prisoner. Metro Jail allows three visitors. Oxbow Jail allows two. Children and minors have specific ID and escort rules, and visitors with warrants are not allowed.

Those rules matter because the jail roster tells you who is in custody, but the visitation page tells you how that person can be reached. Salt Lake County also offers video visitation through outside vendors, so the county roster is only one piece of the daily routine. If you are checking on a transfer, a hold, or a court date, the roster and the visit schedule often need to be read together.

Salt Lake County Bonds And Commissary

Bond and money questions come up fast after a booking. Salt Lake County uses ConnectNetwork for commissary deposits, with site ID 143 and phone support at 888-988-4768. Deposits can be made online, by phone, or at the kiosk in the lobby. The county accepts money orders, cash with a receipt, and certified or cashier's checks, but not personal checks. New deposits may be held for seven days, and up to 50 percent can be used for jail debts. Those details matter when someone needs quick access to money or a bond hold is already in place.

Salt Lake County also notes that bond amounts must be exact. No change is given. Bail bondsmen are available 24/7, and many charges allow a 10 percent cash bond option. Release times vary, but the county says 4 to 12 hours is common once bond is posted and processing moves through the system. That makes the roster useful in a different way. It is not only a custody check. It also shows when a person may be moving toward release.

For family communication, third-party portals can help once the inmate is booked. The county sheriff page at slco.org/sheriff points users toward corrections and visitor resources, while services such as GettingOut can support messaging or calling in some cases. The county does not treat those services as part of the public roster, but they are part of the broader jail process for many families.

Salt Lake County Jail Roster Links

When you need to move fast, keep the core Salt Lake County links in one place. The county corrections page, the live lookup, and the jail dockets page are the three main roster routes. Add the sheriff office page when you need a broader county contact point. Add the SLCPD GRAMA page when the arrest came through city police. Utah Courts at utcourts.gov helps when you need the linked case, and Vinelink helps when you want custody alerts instead of a paper trail.

Salt Lake County has the widest local roster in this project, but it still depends on the user knowing what to ask for. A name search may be enough. A booking number may be better. When the roster is too thin for your need, a records request can fill the gap. When the records request is too broad, the jail lookup can keep you from wasting time. That back-and-forth is normal in Utah jail roster work, and it is why the county page needs both the live tools and the records path.

Use the county roster first, then the court or records office second. That order saves time and usually gives a cleaner result.

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