Hawaii Arrest Records & Inmate Lookup
Find arrest logs, booking schedules, jail rosters, and court record access points for every county in Hawaii. ArrestVault covers all 5 Hawaii counties and county-equivalents in one structured directory — and connects you with a licensed Hawaii criminal defense attorney at no cost.
- Counties covered5
- State abbreviationHI
- Records typeCounty-level
- Attorney consultationFree
About arrest records in Hawaii
In Hawaii, arrest records are primarily generated and maintained at the county sheriff level. When an individual is taken into custody anywhere in Hawaii, they are typically booked into the county jail of the county where the alleged offense occurred. That booking creates the official arrest record — capturing the arrestee's name, date of birth, the arresting agency, the booking date and time, the formal charges filed, the bond amount set by a magistrate, and (in most counties) a booking photograph.
From there, records branch into several streams. The county sheriff's office maintains the jail roster — the live list of currently incarcerated individuals at the county detention facility. The clerk of court for the county logs the resulting criminal case once charges are formally filed, including all hearings, motions, and dispositions. If a person is convicted and sentenced to state prison time, custody transfers to the Hawaii state department of corrections, which publishes its own inmate locator separate from the county jail roster.
ArrestVault organizes all of this jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction. Below you'll find a directory of all 5 Hawaii counties and county-equivalents. Each county page explains where to find local arrest logs, how to look up current inmates, what the booking process looks like in that jurisdiction, and how to access the underlying court records.
All counties in Hawaii (5)
Click any county to view its dedicated arrest records page, including jail roster access, booking schedule, court record links, and a free attorney consultation request.
Hawaii County
FIPS 15001 · arrest logs, jail roster, court access
Honolulu County
FIPS 15003 · arrest logs, jail roster, court access
Kalawao County
FIPS 15005 · arrest logs, jail roster, court access
Kauai County
FIPS 15007 · arrest logs, jail roster, court access
Maui County
FIPS 15009 · arrest logs, jail roster, court access
Public records law in Hawaii
Like every US state, Hawaii has a public records or "sunshine" law that governs which government records — including arrest and booking records — are accessible to members of the public, and how. The general rule is that arrest records, jail rosters, and booking photographs are presumptively public, but specific exemptions apply: juvenile records, sealed or expunged matters, ongoing investigations, and certain victim-protective categories are typically withheld.
If a record concerns you personally and you believe it should be sealed, expunged, or corrected, the right next step is almost always to speak with a criminal defense attorney licensed in Hawaii before contacting the records custodian directly. Sealing and expungement procedures are state-specific and time-sensitive.
What people are saying about ArrestVault in Hawaii
“ArrestVault helped me find the booking record I needed in under a minute. The attorney they connected me with was responsive and knowledgeable.”
“I was nervous about searching public records. The intake felt secure and a defense attorney called the next morning to walk me through next steps.”
“Clear, organized data and a free consultation that actually answered my questions. Worth the five minutes it took to fill out the form.”
What you'll find on each Hawaii county page
- Jail roster access. Direct guidance for finding the county's current inmate roster — the live list of who is in custody at the county detention facility.
- Arrest log information. Where the county publishes its 24-hour or weekly booking logs and how to interpret the data.
- Court record access. The clerk of court system for that county and how to look up case dispositions and hearing dates.
- Booking process. What happens when someone is arrested in that county — intake, magistrate hearing, bond setting.
- Mugshot policy. Whether the county releases booking photographs publicly and the relevant state statute.
- Free attorney consultation. Connect to a bar-licensed Hawaii criminal defense attorney for a no-cost case review.