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Nevada Public Records

  Trusted Public Records Directory

State of Nevada Most Updated Online Public and Criminal Records Portal

Statewide public records directory

Nevada Official Records, Agencies & Answers

Jump into the four biggest statewide record categories, review the refreshed Nevada overview pulled from the live database, and open only direct government sources from the directory below.

Top topic Criminal Records Criminal history tools, sheriff links, and related justice records.
Top topic Court Records Civil, criminal, and court access resources.
Top topic Expungements Record-clearance and expungement guidance.
Top topic Inmate Search Custody, jail, and inmate lookup resources.
NV

Nevada public records, redesigned

State of Nevada Most Updated Online Public and Criminal Records Portal

Updated May 17, 2026

State of Nevada free pubic records online and services that provide divorces, lawsuits, criminal records, background checks. Locate assets in the state of Nevada such as property records and recorded deeds. Search courts for family law related matters, bankruptcies, juvenile and federal cases, superior and district court filings.

Official sources 50 Direct state links currently rendered on this page
Counties County coverage 16 County-level public records coverage tied to Nevada
FAQ / Q&A 9 Live statewide answers surfaced from the database
Bonus cities 4 Standalone city record pages currently shown

About Nevada

Open the dedicated background page for a deeper history, civic overview, and statewide public records context beyond the agency directory.

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Explore cities & counties County links 🗺️ Local map

Move deeper into the state structure with the city directory, county access page, and location-specific record hubs without losing the statewide view.

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✨ County picks County directory: open county access

Explore every linked Nevada specialty page

The hub now links directly to every live state-topic page we found for Nevada. Use the cards below to jump straight into each specialty area.

13 sub pages linked

About Nevada public records

This panel now uses the newer statewide heading content from the database instead of the old generic filler copy.

Updated May 17, 2026

State of Nevada free pubic records online and services that provide divorces, lawsuits, criminal records, background checks. Locate assets in the state of Nevada such as property records and recorded deeds. Search courts for family law related matters, bankruptcies, juvenile and federal cases, superior and district court filings.

Nevada gained statehood in 1864 becoming the nation's 36th state. The name 'Nevada' is derived from the Spanish language meaning snow covered. The state's early economy was based on copper, silver and gold mining. In recent years, tourism and gaming has been the leading source of revenue for the state. Ranked 35th in population in the U.S. with over 2.7 million residents, Nevada is the 7th largest state with over 110,000 square miles. Nearly 70% of the state's residents live in the Las Vegas area. Similar to the federal government, the state of Nevada is comprised of 3 branches.

State snapshot Did you know? In Nevada, arrest searches usually work best locally first. Start with city police if the arrest happened in town, then move to county jail and court records for the booking trail. Bonus tip: city police may open the trail, but county jail and court tools usually carry the case forward.

How the Nevada Public Records Act Actually Works

Nevada's public records law is codified at NRS § 239.001 (Nevada Public Records Act). It gives any person — resident or not, citizen or not, journalist or not — the right to inspect and copy public records held by state and local agencies. In most cases, you do not have to explain why you want the record.

Response time: 5 business days to acknowledge or produce. The agency's response is not necessarily a deadline to deliver records — it tells you whether the records exist and when they'll be produced.

Fee rules: actual cost; first hour of staff time free, $30/hour after. Agencies cannot inflate charges to discourage requests.

If your request is denied or unreasonably delayed, the law typically provides a mechanism to appeal — either administratively or by filing a petition in state court. Many states award attorney's fees to requesters who prevail on a wrongfully denied request.

What You Cannot Get in Nevada (the honest answer)

Many directory sites promise things Nevada law specifically restricts. Here's what's actually true:

  • Rap sheet access: Subject only via fingerprint. Third-party "instant background check" sites that promise a full Nevada criminal history are typically aggregating older court data — not the official state record.
  • Sealed and expunged records: records cleared under Nevada's expungement law (NRS § 179.245 (sealing)) are removed from public criminal history reports.
  • Juvenile records are generally confidential under Nevada law and not available without court order.
  • Active investigation records, attorney-client privileged documents, draft notes, and personnel files are exempt under standard exceptions to the Nevada Public Records Act.
  • Booking photos (mugshots) have increasingly restricted commercial use across Nevada and most states — paid "mugshot removal" sites are exposed to civil liability in many jurisdictions.

Expungement and Record Clearing in Nevada

Nevada's record-clearing law is found at NRS § 179.245 (sealing).

Eligibility: sealing available 2-15 years after release depending on offense; many misdemeanors qualify after 2 years.

The petition or application is typically filed in the court of conviction. Filing fees, waiting periods, and exclusions vary by offense type — serious violent crimes and most sexual offenses are commonly excluded. Many states are moving toward automatic ("Clean Slate") sealing for qualifying records.

If you believe your Nevada record contains an error or includes an offense that should have been cleared, you have the right to challenge it through the state criminal history repository — typically by submitting a written claim with documentation.

How to Get Your Own Nevada Criminal Record

If you need your own Nevada criminal history — for an employer, a licensing board, an immigration application, or just to know what's there — the state record is maintained by the Nevada Department of Public Safety (DPS) Records Bureau.

Walkthrough:

  1. Choose your method: DPS fingerprint-based check $26 in-state or $40 out-of-state.
  2. Complete the required form (most states use a standard request form available from the Nevada Department of Public Safety website).
  3. Submit your request along with the fee. Fingerprint-based methods provide the most complete and accurate record but take longer.
  4. Turnaround: 2-3 weeks.
  5. Review the response. If you find errors, the law at NRS § 179A.075 provides procedures for correcting or challenging inaccurate criminal history information.

Fingerprint-based criminal history checks are considered the official record. Name-based checks are faster and cheaper but can miss records or include records belonging to people with similar names — verify identity carefully.

Notable Nevada Record Laws You Should Know

  • AB 192 (2019): Reduced waiting periods for many sealing categories.
  • NRS § 179A.075: the statute governing the maintenance, dissemination, and inspection of state criminal history records in Nevada.
  • Federal interaction: the FBI maintains a separate national criminal history database (the Identification, Information & Investigation Services / NGI). Some Nevada background checks include a fingerprint forward to the FBI for $13–$32 additional fee, depending on purpose.

Frequently asked questions

Clearer question cards, modern spacing, and the same live statewide answers from the database.

Q What is included in a Nevada background check?
In Nevada, background checks are governed by the Nevada Public Records Act (NPRA) (Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) Chapter 239). They may include criminal history, sex offender status, court filings, arrest records, and vital statistics. Agencies must respond within 5 business days for a written response. The law is administered by Nevada Secretary of State's Office, Nevada State Library, Archives and Public Records (NSLA), (775) 684-3360.
Q Where can I find police reports in Nevada?
Police reports in Nevada are public records under the Nevada Public Records Act (NPRA). Submit your request to the agency that generated the report. Who may request: Any person - no residency requirement. Response deadline: 5 business days for a written response. If access is denied, you may appeal to district or circuit court. Police report requests in Nevada are processed under the Nevada Public Records Act (NRS § 239.010). Requesters must provide the incident date, location, and the names of parties involved. The Nevada Department of Public Safety administers state trooper report requests from its records office in Carson City, NV. For local reports, contact the municipality or county where the incident occurred. Most agencies respond within 10 business days; certified copies are available for court use.
Q What are the procedures to obtain Nevada vital records, and what information is included?
Vital records (birth, death, marriage, divorce) in Nevada are maintained by the state Department of Health or Vital Statistics. Standard fees: Actual cost of reproduction; agencies may not charge for electronic records prov. Certified copies carry separate fee schedules. Fee waivers may be available for journalists, nonprofits, and public-interest requesters - always ask.
Q What is the school district and performance data for Nevada?
The Nevada Department of Education provides school district performance data for the state. The data includes information on student achievement, graduation rates, and other indicators of school performance. The data can be accessed through the Nevada Report Card website. The Nevada Department of Education (doe.nv.gov), headquartered in Carson City, NV, is the authoritative source for Nevada school district performance metrics. Reported metrics include proficiency rates in English language arts and mathematics, English learner progress, science achievement, and school climate indicators. Data is updated annually and can be searched by district, school, or student group on the department's data portal.
Q What is the crime statistics for Nevada?
The most reliable place to get current Nevada crime statistics is the Nevada Department of Public Safety (dps.nv.gov), which publishes the annual Crime in Nevada report. The FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program at ucr.fbi.gov also publishes state totals each year. Because these numbers change every year and methodology differs between Summary UCR and NIBRS reporting, we link directly to the official sources rather than republishing figures that may be outdated. For local breakdowns by county or municipality, most state police agencies publish offense counts by agency in their annual report PDFs.
Q If I get arrested in Nevada where would I go to jail and court? include address.
If arrested in Nevada, you would be taken to the local county jail. Court appearances are scheduled in the county where the arrest occurred. Under the Nevada Public Records Act (NPRA), arrest records and booking information are generally public. Oversight: Nevada Secretary of State's Office, Nevada State Library, Archives and Public Records (NSLA), (775) 684-3360. Appeals go to district or circuit court.
Q Can I find Public records in Nevada State Library?
Yes. Nevada state and public libraries provide access to public records databases. The Nevada Public Records Act (NPRA) (Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) Chapter 239) guarantees public access to government documents. Many libraries offer free access to LexisNexis, court records portals, and vital record indexes. Under the Nevada Public Records Act (NRS § 239.010), Nevada residents can access public records through state and local libraries. The Nevada State Library and Archives, 100 N maintains research collections including historical newspapers, land records, probate files, and legislative archives. Libraries also provide free access to LexisNexis Public Records and other subscription databases not available at home. Reference librarians are available to help navigate Nevada government records portals and submit public records requests.
Q Where is the Nevada State Library located?
The Nevada State Library and Archives is located in Carson City, Nevada. In addition to its main location, the Nevada State Library coordinates resources and services for public libraries statewide. Patrons can access LexisNexis, ProQuest Historical Newspapers, and PACER court records indexes through the library. Under the Nevada Public Records Act (NRS § 239.010), government documents are available for public inspection during regular business hours. Reference librarians in Carson City, NV can assist with inter-library loans, records requests, and genealogical research inquiries.
Q Nevada State fingerprinting office
The Nevada Department of Public Safety has a list of approved fingerprinting locations on their website. You can find the list here: https://www.nv.gov/Fingerprinting_Locations/. In addition to Nevada Department of Public Safety facilities in Carson City, many county sheriff offices and city police departments in Nevada offer walk-in or appointment fingerprinting. LiveScan electronic fingerprinting is accepted for most Nevada licensing boards, courts, and employment agencies. The ORI (Originating Agency Identifier) number must be provided by the requesting agency. Fees typically range from $5 to $50 depending on purpose. Results are sent directly to the requester's agency, not to the applicant.

1 Nevada city with a standalone page

Fun fact: some Nevada cities skip the county layer entirely. They have their own public record hubs, go straight to them below.

Community

Boulder City

Open the local page for focused public record links and a quicker statewide sweep into this community.

Open Boulder City records