Search Utah County Jail Roster

Utah County jail roster research gives you one of the clearest local custody views in the state. The county roster can show who is in jail now, how they were booked, what charges are listed, and whether the person is on an electronic monitor or still active in custody. If you only have a name, start there. If you also have a date of birth, case number, or arresting agency, the search gets much tighter. This page brings the Utah County jail roster, records rules, and jail contact details into one place so you can move from a broad search to the right local step.

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Utah County Jail Roster Quick Facts

30 Days Booking Photos
15 Min Some Data Updates
Daily Roster Updates
1 Security Center

Utah County Jail Roster

Utah County runs the most complete jail roster in the state aside from Salt Lake County. The public roster supports inmate search by name and shows all current inmates and inmate statistics. It includes full name, arrest date and time, arresting agency, booking date and time, booking number, release date, status, height, weight, eye color, hair color, gender, year of birth, birth country, and charge detail. The charge section can include court, case number, hold status, bail amount, bondable status, and a short charge description.

The roster is also useful because it gives you more than a name. It can tell you whether the person is active, on an electronic monitor, or moving through release. Booking photos are displayed for 30 days only. The county says the roster updates daily, and some data refreshes every 15 minutes. That kind of cadence makes the site strong for current searches, but it also means a blank release date can happen even when the status has already changed.

Roster utahcounty.gov
Address 3075 North Main, Spanish Fork, UT 84660
Phones 801-851-4200 main, 801-851-4302 jail
Fax 801-851-4009
Update cadence Daily, with some data every 15 minutes

Utah County Jail Roster Search

Searching the Utah County jail roster is easy when you keep the right details in front of you. The county site lets you search by name, and the roster is built to show current inmate status quickly. Because the jail page is so detailed, it can answer questions that other counties cannot. If you need to know the arresting agency, booking time, or bondable status, the Utah County page is often the right place to start. If you need the related court case, the roster can point you toward the next step without making you guess.

The screenshot below comes from utahcounty.gov, which is the main doorway to the Utah County jail roster and related county services.

Utah County Jail Roster and county sheriff resource page

Utah County uses that site as the front door for search and records work. If the inmate does not show up right away, check the spelling, try aliases, and confirm the county before you move on. A recent booking may still be catching up in the system, especially if the arrest happened very recently or if the person was moved fast.

The roster is also strong for print-friendly review. That matters when you want to track a booking trail, compare charge data, or keep a paper copy while you call the jail. If you need a broader legal trail, add Utah Courts to the search and match the inmate entry to the case file.

Utah County GRAMA Requests

When the public roster is not enough, Utah County uses a standard GRAMA request path. Written requests go to Utah County Sheriff, Attention: Jail Records, 3075 North Main, Spanish Fork, UT 84660. The county asks for the name, aliases, date of birth, date range, and crime details when the request is for jail records or a historical record. That approach helps the records staff find the right file without widening the search too much.

Utah GRAMA is governed by Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2. Under that framework, Utah County has 10 business days to respond, may ask for photo ID, and can apply normal copy fees or a fee waiver review. Juvenile records stay protected, and active investigation records may be withheld. Those are standard public-record limits, but they matter most when a jail roster search turns into a request for older reports or supporting documents.

For historical records, Utah County says to include the inmate name and aliases, date of birth, date range of incarceration, crime charged or convicted of, facility name, and any other helpful information. That is a good model for modern requests too. Narrow, dated requests are easier to work than a broad one. If you already know the booking date, add it. If you know the facility, add that too. The more exact the request, the faster the response usually is.

Note: A blank or delayed release date on the roster does not always mean the person is still in the jail, so confirm the latest status before you rely on the screen alone.

Utah County Mail and Visits

Utah County keeps mail and visitation rules direct. The research says to contact the jail directly for current mail policy, because the jail can change details for security or housing reasons. The general rule set is simple. All mail is inspected. Return addresses are required. Legal mail must be marked correctly. Cash is not accepted. Books must come from the publisher. Photos are allowed in 4x6 format. Those rules are common in Utah jails, but it is still smart to confirm them before you mail anything.

Visitation is more flexible here than in some counties. Video visitation is available, but the schedule can vary by housing unit. Pre-registration is required, and visitors must show photo ID and follow the dress code. That means the roster may tell you the custody status, but the jail contact line tells you how to reach the person. For many families, those two steps happen together. Check the roster, then check the visit rules.

Utah County's jail phone number is 801-851-4302. That is the best number when you need to ask about mail rules, visiting hours, or whether an inmate has moved. The roster gives you the name. The phone line fills in the live details. If you are trying to plan a visit the same day, start there.

Utah County Bonds And Release

Bond information in Utah County is tied closely to the roster. The county says bond amounts are available on the roster, which makes the page useful after the booking has already posted. Cash is accepted, bail bondsmen are available, and many charges may allow a 10 percent cash bond option. The county also notes that OR release may be possible. That gives the roster practical value beyond simple custody verification. It helps you see whether the person can move toward release.

Because Utah County updates often, the roster can be a better guide than a stale phone note. Still, the jail should be called when the situation is time-sensitive. Release can move fast once bond is paid or an order is entered. If the bond has not posted yet, the roster may still show the same status for a while. That delay is normal. The key is to use the roster, the jail phone, and the court information together instead of leaning on only one source.

Utah Courts and Vinelink help with the rest of the trail. Vinelink is useful for custody alerts, while utcourts.gov helps connect the booking to a criminal case or hearing. If you are tracking release, those two links often matter as much as the roster itself.

Utah County Jail Roster Links

Use the Utah County site first, then narrow to the jail records team if you need something older or more complete. The county roster page, the sheriff records address, Utah Courts, and Vinelink cover most inmate search needs. That is usually enough for a current custody check, a hearing look-up, or a simple verification call. The roster is especially strong when you need charge detail, bond status, or a quick read on whether the person is on monitor or still booked.

The county is large enough that a fast search can save a lot of time. If the person was booked in Spanish Fork, Provo, Orem, Lehi, or another Utah County city, the county jail roster is still the main path. City police may have the arrest report, but the jail roster is what confirms current custody. That makes the county page the first stop for most users.

When the roster is not enough, use the county records office and the court system together. That keeps the search focused and avoids broad requests that slow things down.

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