Search Kenosha County Phone Directory

Kenosha County Phone Directory searches help you reach the office that actually holds the record. That matters here because the county portal, the Register of Deeds, and the court access tools all serve different jobs. Start with the county portal when you only need a contact path. Move to WCCA when you need a court case look-up. Go to the Register of Deeds when the search turns to land, birth, death, or marriage records. A tight request saves time. It also keeps you from calling the wrong desk first.

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Kenosha County Phone Directory Overview

1010 56th St. Register of Deeds
262-653-2444 ROD Phone
WCCA Court Access
Data Portal Property Search

Kenosha County sits along Lake Michigan in southeastern Wisconsin. The county portal at kenoshacounty.org is the broad entry point for county contact paths. It is the first stop when you are not yet sure whether the record belongs with the court, the deeds office, or the county data tools. The portal helps you sort that out before you spend time on calls or in-person visits.

The county keeps two big record lanes in play. The Wisconsin Circuit Court Access system at wcca.wicourts.gov gives basic court case details. The Register of Deeds handles recorded property and certified vital records. That split matters because the right search depends on the office that owns the file. Once you know the holder, the request gets easier to shape.

Use the county portal when you want a general contact trail. Use WCCA when you want to confirm a case. Use the Register of Deeds when you need a document copy or a recorded history tied to property or a vital record.

Kenosha County Phone Directory for Court Records

Kenosha County court access starts with the state court portal, then moves through county systems if you need more than a summary. WCCA lets you check case status, party names, and docket entries before you ask for copies. That is useful when you want to know whether a case exists, which county it is in, and whether the matter is still active. It is a quick first pass that saves a lot of guesswork.

The county itself keeps court access tied to its own systems and offices. If you need the full file, the county portal is the broad way in, and the court system is the place to verify the case details first. That is the cleanest route when you do not yet know the exact filing year or case number. A short search can keep you from asking for the wrong file.

For Wisconsin court forms, filing guidance, and general court tools, the official site at wicourts.gov stays useful. It is the wider court guide when you need to understand the next step after a case lookup. If you only need a status check, WCCA is enough. If you need context, the court system page fills that gap.

  • Full party name or case caption
  • Case number, if you have it
  • Approximate filing year
  • Case type or court lane

Kenosha County Phone Directory for Deeds

The Kenosha County Register of Deeds sits at 1010 56th Street, Kenosha, WI 53140, and the phone number is 262-653-2444. The office keeps birth, death, and marriage records, and it can issue certified copies. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Appointments can be arranged through kenoshacounty.timetap.com or by calling the office. That makes the deeds office a practical first stop for certified record work.

The office also offers land-record access and fraud protection tools. Kenosha County uses Land Notification to alert property owners when a monitored name or parcel appears on a recorded document. The county also supports Laredo and Tapestry for recorded document access, plus LandShark for online document search and purchase. Those tools are useful when you need a deed image, a mortgage record, or a property trail that goes back through the county archive.

Certified copies cost $20 for the first record and $3 for each additional copy ordered at the same time. Regular copies are $2 for the first page and $1 for additional pages, with a $5 certification fee added when you need an official copy. That fee pattern matters when you are deciding between a plain printout and a certified document that another office will accept.

The official register page at kenoshacountywi.gov/522/Register-of-Deeds is the right local link for that work. Use it when you need the office path, the appointment route, or the record holder for a land or vital record request.

Kenosha County property searches run through the county data systems as well as the Register of Deeds. The Data Portal at kenoshacountywi.gov/229/Data-Portal gives you a public route into property information, ownership clues, and parcel-level details. The Property Inquiry tools let you search by address, owner name, or parcel ID. That is useful when the street address is easier to remember than the document number.

The portal is also practical because it gives county data in one place. You can use it to see a property from more than one angle before you go hunting for the underlying deed. That helps with title questions, address checks, and ownership lookups. It is not the same as a certified copy, but it is the fastest way to narrow the field. When a search starts broad, the data portal makes it smaller and more accurate.

Public access is not limited to one screen. Kenosha County also provides public terminals at the county administration building and at library branches. That matters for users who need a free search lane but do not want to rely on a home connection. If you are tracking a parcel or trying to match a name to a record, the county gives you more than one way to do it.

Kenosha County Phone Directory Requests

Wisconsin public records law frames how Kenosha County answers requests. Wis. Stat. § 19.31 sets the public policy for access. Wis. Stat. § 19.35 gives requesters the right to inspect and copy records. Wis. Stat. § 19.36 explains the limits and exemptions that can lead to redaction. Those rules matter when a county office needs to release part of a file but not all of it.

For a county request, the best approach is simple. Name the office, name the record, and add the detail that helps staff find it fast. A case number, parcel number, or document date is better than a broad topic. If you need a vital record, go to the Register of Deeds. If you need a court summary, check WCCA first. If you need the county property trail, use the Data Portal and then move to the deeds office if you need a copy.

The Wisconsin Vital Records office at dhs.wisconsin.gov/vitalrecords/index.htm stays useful when a request needs a state fallback. That is the right move when the county desk points you there or when you need statewide guidance on a certified copy path.

Note: Kenosha County offices can separate public pages from protected details, so a redacted release may be the fastest answer when a file includes private material.

Kenosha County Phone Directory Images

The county portal at kenoshacounty.org is the broad starting point for county records and contact paths. The image below shows that main county entry page.

Kenosha County Phone Directory county portal

Use it when you want the county's own starting point before you move into the deeds office, the court system, or the data portal.

The county Register of Deeds page at kenoshacountywi.gov/522/Register-of-Deeds is the next step when you need land or vital records.

Kenosha County Phone Directory Wisconsin Vital Records office

That state image helps when the county desk sends you to the statewide certified-copy path.

For court lookups, the Wisconsin Circuit Court Access system at wcca.wicourts.gov stays close at hand.

Kenosha County Phone Directory Wisconsin Circuit Court Access

It is the quickest way to confirm a Kenosha County case before you call or visit the courthouse.

The cleanest Kenosha County search starts with the right holder. Court case, use WCCA. Property or deed record, use the Register of Deeds or the Data Portal. Vital copy, use the deeds office. General county contact, start with the county portal. That simple split keeps the search short and keeps you out of the wrong office queue.

If you already have a name, a date, or a parcel number, keep it in front of you when you call. Those details help staff find the right record faster and cut down on back-and-forth. The county gives you multiple ways to search, but the strongest request is still the narrowest one.

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