Find Traffic Ticket Records in St. Croix County

St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records are usually easiest to start with the county clerk, then confirm through WCCA or the right municipal court. If you need to check a citation, find a court date, or get a copy, the county gives you a public route and a local office route. Hudson cases may also pass through municipal court, so the court name on the ticket matters. Start with the name, citation number, or rough date, then use the record trail to see where the file is held.

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St. Croix County Overview

(715) 386-4600 Clerk Main Phone
8:00 AM - 4:30 PM Weekday Hours
Hudson and other municipalities Local Court Paths
Public terminals Courthouse Access

St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records Access

The main county entry point is the St. Croix County government site, which points you toward court contacts and records help for traffic matters. The Clerk of Courts is at 1101 Carmichael Road in Hudson, and the top research phone is (715) 386-4600. The deeper clerk contact is (715) 386-4760, with fax at (715) 386-4761. Hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM.

The county page below gives you a clean local view before you move into WCCA or the clerk office. That is useful when you want the official path but do not yet know whether the citation belongs in circuit court or a municipal court.

St. Croix County traffic ticket records on the county government website

That county-level view is a good first stop when you want the public office path before you search the case file.

St. Croix County Clerk of Courts

The St. Croix County Clerk of Courts is the office that keeps the circuit court file in order. That office is the right place to ask about older paper records, certified copies, or a record that does not show enough detail in the public search. It also helps when the citation has a traffic piece and a separate court piece, because the clerk can point you to the branch that actually holds the file.

St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records often move in layers. The county site gives you the office contact, WCCA gives you the public result, and the clerk gives you the paper file. That is the best order if you need to confirm a case before you make a trip. The county directory also keeps the general courthouse contact close at hand, which helps if you only need the front desk before you reach the clerk division.

Keep the address, the main phone, and the traffic line together. That makes it easier to ask for the right file the first time.

Note: Public access terminals at the courthouse are useful when the online result is thin, incomplete, or hard to match to the citation in your hand.

Hudson Municipal Court and Local Traffic

The official Hudson Municipal Court handles local ordinance traffic matters and other municipal cases. The court page says it has jurisdiction over most traffic law violations and city ordinance violations, so a ticket written in Hudson may stay in the local court path instead of going to circuit court. That court also uses its own procedures for pleas, payment, and hearing dates.

St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records can also touch other municipal courts across the county. The rule of thumb is simple. If the citation names a municipal court, start there. If it points to state law or the county circuit court, use WCCA and the clerk office. The court name on the ticket is the best guide because it tells you where the public file should appear first.

That split matters when you are trying to avoid a second trip. Some records live in the county file, while others stay in the city file and only show a basic public trace.

St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records Copies

If you need a copy, the clerk side becomes the key step. The research notes a copy fee of $1.25 per page and a certification fee of $5.00. The county circuit court fees page is the official place to check those costs before you submit a request. That keeps the request clear if you only need a few pages or if you need a certified file for another office.

The clerk office is also the right place to ask about a traffic file that is not showing enough detail online. St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records may be easy to confirm through WCCA, but a paper request can still be needed for older records, certified copies, or a more complete history. That is where the county contact numbers help. The general courthouse phone gives you the front desk, and the deeper clerk phone puts you closer to the record itself.

For forms and broader court guidance, the official county and court pages are the safest route. They keep the request in the same system that holds the case.

St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records Next Steps

St. Croix County Traffic Ticket Records are easiest when you move from the county site to WCCA, then to the clerk office if the public result is not enough. That order is simple, but it works. It also keeps you from calling the wrong office when a citation belongs in municipal court. The court name on the ticket, not just the county, tells you where to go first.

If a result looks incomplete, do not stop there. Use the courthouse terminals, the county site, or the clerk office to finish the check. The public search is good for a quick answer. The clerk file is what you want when the case needs a copy, a certification, or a more exact record trail.

Keep the name, citation number, and court name together, then work from the public record to the office file. That keeps the search fast and local.

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