Search Racine Phone Directory

Racine Phone Directory searches are useful when you want the city side first and the county side second. The City of Racine keeps its own records through city departments, while Racine County holds the court, deed, and sheriff files that often sit behind a city request. That split matters. It keeps a local search simple when you only need a city office, and it gives you a clear next step when the file belongs to county staff. Start with the city portal, then move to the county page only if the record really lives there.

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Racine Phone Directory Overview

City Clerk City Records
262-635-7700 Police Department
730 Washington Ave. Treasurer
LandShark Assessment Search

The official city portal at cityofracine.org is the cleanest starting point for Racine city records. The City Clerk's Office handles city records, and the city portal is the best way to find the right branch before you call. That matters because the city keeps a number of public record paths open, and the wrong office can slow things down. The portal helps you sort the work before the request starts.

Racine also sits inside a county record system. That means some city searches end at city hall, while others move on to Racine County for court, deed, or sheriff records. The city portal is still the first step because it gives you the local path. Once you know the holder, the rest of the search gets easier. That is the practical value of a good phone directory page.

Use the city site when you only need an office name, a city contact, or a place to start. Use the county path when the file turns out to belong to the courthouse or the register of deeds instead.

Racine Phone Directory for City Records

The City Clerk's Office is the main place for Racine city records. That is where you look for city minutes, ordinances, meeting files, and general city requests. The city portal keeps the clerk path open, and it also points to the police department when the question is about a city incident or report. If you need a quick office check, the portal is usually enough to tell you where to go next.

The City of Racine Police Department maintains law enforcement records and can be reached at 262-635-7700. The Records Bureau is at 730 Center Street, Racine, WI 53403. If you need an incident report or a local police contact, that is the city desk to start with. A clean request with a date, location, or report number makes the process easier. That small detail matters more than a broad topic line.

City records are often easier to sort when you split them by desk. Clerk for city government files. Police for incident reports. Court for ordinance matters. The city portal is the map that keeps those paths straight.

  • City Clerk for minutes and ordinances
  • Police Department for incident and report questions
  • City portal for the first office check
  • City hall records for local administrative files

Racine Property and Tax Contacts

Property and tax searches in Racine often begin with the City Treasurer. The treasurer page at cityofracine.org/government/departments/treasurer is the official city link. The office is at 730 Washington Avenue, Room 103, Racine, WI 53403. City tax payments go to the city through July 31, not to the county for the second installment like many other places in Racine County. That is an important split to remember because the city path is different from the rest of the county.

Tax payment options include the Racine County LandShark system, mail, in person, and participating banks. The city also administers the Lottery and Gaming Credit for primary residences, and applications for that credit are due by January 31. Those details matter when you need proof of payment or when you are checking the current year's bill. The city side handles the current tax season, while county records can still help with the property trail.

Assessment questions and objections should go to the City Assessor during Open Book. Assessment data and property traits are also available through LandShark. That means a city address can point you to two different records paths, one for tax payment and one for property detail. It helps to know which one you need before you start.

Racine Phone Directory and Police Records

Racine Police records are another key part of the city search. The department handles law-enforcement records, and the Records Bureau at 730 Center Street is the place to ask about the file. If you need a report copy, the best request is tight and clear. A name, a date, and a location go much farther than a broad question. That makes the work faster for staff and easier for you to track.

The city side also helps when a case moves into court. If the issue turns into a county matter, the Racine County Clerk of Circuit Court at racinecounty.com/departments/clerk-of-courts and the broader court page at racinecounty.com/departments/clerk-of-circuit-court become the next stop. WCCA at wcca.wicourts.gov helps you check case status before you call. That keeps a Racine search from jumping around blindly.

The city portal, police office, and county court links work best as a chain. City first. Court second. County records if the file lives there. That simple order saves time in Racine.

Some Racine searches end at county offices instead of city hall. The Racine County Courthouse at 730 Wisconsin Avenue is where court, deed, and sheriff records move through the county system. The county Register of Deeds, the clerk of circuit court, and the sheriff all have their own pages and contact paths. If the city portal tells you that the file belongs to the county, that is the next stop. The county pages keep the search local but move it one step deeper.

The county Register of Deeds uses LandShark for property records, while the clerk of circuit court uses WCCA and courthouse requests for case files. The sheriff office handles incident reports, arrest records, and inmate lookup questions. That makes Racine city and county searches feel connected, even though they are not held by the same office. The key is to match the record type to the holder.

For state-level backup, Wisconsin Vital Records at dhs.wisconsin.gov/vitalrecords is the official source when a certified record or state verification is the better route. If a county or city desk sends you there, it is because the state page is the right fit for that piece of the search. Racine users can keep the search local and still use the state when needed.

Racine Phone Directory Images

The City of Racine portal at cityofracine.org is the broadest local entry point. The screenshot below shows the official city site that ties the city desk together.

Racine Phone Directory city portal

It is the best starting point when you need a city contact before you move to county records.

The Wisconsin state portal at wisconsin.gov can help when a Racine search needs a wider public-records frame. The image below shows that state landing page.

Racine Phone Directory Wisconsin state portal

That page gives you a clean backup if the city office sends you toward state help.

When the search turns into a court question, Wisconsin Circuit Court Access at wcca.wicourts.gov is the next useful tool. The image below points to the statewide case lookup portal.

Racine Phone Directory Wisconsin Circuit Court Access

It helps when you want to confirm a Racine County case before you call the clerk.

Racine searches go faster when you keep the office and the record type in front of you. Use the city portal for city records, the police desk for incident reports, the treasurer for tax questions, and the county pages for court, deed, or sheriff files. That separation keeps the search clean and cuts down on transfers. If you only need a phone number or office name, the city portal may be enough. If you need the file, ask for the exact document.

Bring the best details you have. A report number, a parcel number, a year, or an address gives staff a better shot at finding the right record fast. That is true for city hall and for the county office. Racine works best when the search is narrow and the target is clear.

Note: A focused request is usually faster, and city or county staff can tell you early whether the file is online, in office, or stored elsewhere.

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