Search Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records usually start in the county district court in Dayton, but the full record path can also touch the superior court clerk and the statewide Washington case search. If you have a citation, a hearing date, a party name, or only a partial case number, the county still gives you a workable way to sort out where the file lives. That matters because traffic records are not all the same. Some are simple infractions. Some involve parking, criminal matters, or civil filings that later land in a different office. The fastest search starts with the right court, then moves to the official record holder for copies or confirmation.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Overview

341 E Main St Superior Court
509-382-4812 District Court
Odyssey Portal Superior Court Search
Dayton County Seat

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Search Tools

Columbia County District Court is the main county traffic court resource. The county page says the court includes Dayton Municipal Court and hears traffic and non-traffic infractions, parking cases, criminal matters, and civil matters. That gives Columbia County a clear starting point when a ticket is written in Dayton or another local location that routes into the county system. It also means the search is not just about one docket. A traffic citation can be attached to a hearing, a payment, or a court request, and each of those tasks may point to a different official page.

The district court records request form is especially useful when you need to move from a case search to actual copies. The official form says you can use a name and date of birth, a name and Washington driver license number, or a case number to identify the file. It also lets you ask for inspection or copies and gives delivery options by mail, fax, or email. That makes the county process practical. You do not have to guess what the court wants. You can match your request to one of the accepted combinations and send it through the method the court already lists.

For a broad court lookup, the statewide Washington Courts case search helps you confirm whether the case appears in the Washington court system. The site is a reference tool, not the complete court record, but it is helpful when the citation number is hard to read or when you want to see whether the file has already been entered. If the matter is in superior court, the county research also points to the Odyssey Portal. If the matter stays in district court, the local Columbia County pages remain the better starting point.

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Offices

The county separates traffic record work between the district court and the superior court clerk. The district court handles the citation, hearing choice, and the response path. The superior court clerk keeps permanent superior records and gives information without acting as legal counsel. That split matters when a traffic issue is straightforward versus when it becomes part of a larger court file. If you know which office owns the record, you can avoid sending the request to the wrong counter.

Columbia County Superior Court 341 E Main Street, Suite 2, Dayton, WA 99328
Phone: 509-382-4321
Hours: Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., closed noon to 1 p.m.
Columbia County Clerk Kriston Chapman, Deputy Felice Wiens
Permanent superior court records and public information
Columbia County District Court Includes Dayton Municipal Court
Handles traffic, non-traffic infractions, parking, criminal, and civil matters
District Court Language Access 509-382-4812
Superior Court Search Odyssey Portal
Statewide Case Search dw.courts.wa.gov

Columbia County's superior court page is useful even for traffic questions because it gives the broader case context. The judge is Brooke J Burns, and the court shares that judge with Asotin and Garfield Counties. That shared structure matters when a case involves more than a simple ticket search. It also helps explain why the county courts are built around linked offices instead of separate standalone traffic counters for every community.

The clerk page is the place to think about when you need the official superior court file. The clerk maintains permanent records and can point you to the record trail, but the page also makes clear that staff provide information rather than legal advice. That distinction helps keep a Columbia County search focused. Ask for the record, the docket, or the copy you need. Do not expect the office to interpret the case for you.

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Images

A screenshot from the official Columbia County Superior Court page shows the Dayton courthouse that handles the county's higher-level record work.

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Columbia County Superior Court page

That page is the best reminder that the county's traffic record trail can extend into superior court when a case is appealed or filed at that level.

A screenshot from the official Columbia County District Court page shows the local traffic court and infraction structure for Dayton and the county system.

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Columbia County District Court page

That district court page matters when the citation itself is the only thing you have and you need the right office before requesting copies.

A screenshot from the official Odyssey Portal shows the statewide superior court case system used for participating courts, including Columbia County.

Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Odyssey Portal page

That image is useful when a Columbia County traffic matter has moved beyond the district court docket and into a searchable superior court file.

How Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records Move

Columbia County traffic matters move in stages. The district court handles the citation and the first response. The records request form handles copies and inspection. The superior court clerk handles permanent superior records. The statewide search helps you see the file across Washington courts, but it is still a checkpoint rather than the final copy. That order matters if you are trying to find a missing hearing date, verify the case number, or request a document that is not visible on the first search screen.

Language access is available through the district court at no cost, which is practical for people who need a clearer route to the right filing or hearing. The court's contact page also helps when you need to ask a simple case question before filing a request. Because the court hears both traffic and non-traffic matters, it can be useful to know whether your citation belongs with an infraction file, a parking file, or a broader criminal or civil record. That choice changes where you ask and what records you request.

If a ticket is old, the county record trail can still be found, but it may no longer sit on the same page as a current citation. Use the district court form first when you know the case details. Use the superior court clerk when the file is in permanent records or when the case has moved into that court level. Then use the state search to confirm that the result matches the court file. That is the safest route for Columbia County Traffic Ticket Records because it keeps the local court as the source of truth and uses the state tools as support.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results