Hawaii Cities
Below are the main cities in Hawaii with local police stations, district courts, and booking records. Each city page lists which station handles arrests, which community correctional center holds inmates, and how to ask for booking photos. Most Oahu cities tie back to the Honolulu Police Department and the Oahu Community Correctional Center. Maui and Hawaii Island cities tie to their own county agencies. Pick a city below to see details.
Hawaii Cities and Jail Mugshots
The cities listed above split up across the four main Hawaii counties. Sixteen of them sit on Oahu and fall under the Honolulu Police Department. Three sit on Maui in Maui County. One sits on the Big Island in Hawaii County. Each city ties to a local police station, a county or state jail, and a district court for misdemeanor cases.
Most Oahu cities send their inmates to the Oahu Community Correctional Center at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu. Maui cities send inmates to the Maui Community Correctional Center at 600 Waiale Road, Wailuku. Hilo inmates on the Big Island go to the Hawaii Community Correctional Center at 60 Punahele Street. The booking photo taken on arrival stays in the state OffenderTrak file for the life of the case.
Use the Hawaii DPS Inmate Search for a quick custody lookup on any city in the state. For alerts on moves and releases, use the Hawaii SAVIN VINE system. Both tools work across every city on this page.
Each city page below breaks down the local patrol station, the booking jail, the district court, the fee chart, and the steps to file a UIPA request. The state law at HRS Chapter 92F applies to every city equally. That law opens up inmate info and arrest info to the public.
City Pages by County
Honolulu County cities on this page: Urban Honolulu, East Honolulu, Pearl City, Waipahu, Kailua, Kaneohe, Mililani Town, Mililani Mauka, Ewa Gentry, Ewa Beach, Kapolei, Makakilo, Wahiawa, Ocean Pointe, Schofield Barracks, Royal Kunia. Each runs through HPD district stations and OCCC booking.
Maui County cities: Kahului, Kihei, Wailuku. Each ties to the Maui Police Department and MCCC. Hawaii County cities: Hilo. That page ties to the Hawaii Police Department and HCCC. Pick the city page that fits your case for local contacts and step-by-step help.
Local Records Paths for Each City
Every city listed on this page links back to a main county police force. The HPD covers all Oahu cities through eight district stations. District 1 holds Urban Honolulu. District 2 holds Wahiawa, Royal Kunia, Mililani Town, and Mililani Mauka. District 3 holds Pearl City and Waipahu. District 4 holds Kailua and Kaneohe. District 7 holds East Honolulu. District 8 holds Kapolei, Ewa Gentry, Ocean Pointe, Ewa Beach, and Makakilo. Wahiawa also serves the Schofield Barracks area for off-base civilian cases.
Maui cities all work through the Maui Police Department at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku. Records requests go through the same unit. Hilo works through the Hawaii Police Department at 349 Kapi'olani Street. Each department holds a daily booking log that shows recent arrests. The Honolulu Police Department arrest log stays online for 14 days. The Hawaii Police booking log posts a daily PDF too.
All city inmate records sit inside the state's OffenderTrak system. That file holds the booking photo, fingerprints, custody status, and case info. The same file follows an inmate across moves between facilities. Each city page on this site gives you direct links to the police station, jail, court, and state tools for that location.
For a full conviction history, use the eCrim portal at $5 per search and $12 per official record. For current custody, use the DPS Inmate Search. For alerts, use the SAVIN VINE system. These state tools work for every city on this page.
UIPA Rules for Every City
Hawaii's Uniform Information Practices Act at HRS Chapter 92F applies to every city on this page. Section 92F-12(a)(13) makes inmate info public. Section 92F-12(a)(5) makes arrest info public. Each city's police station has 10 business days to answer a request. Complex cases can run up to 20 business days with a delay notice.
The Office of Information Practices runs the UIPA statewide. It handles appeals when a city or county denies a records request. Call (808) 586-1400 for appeal info.
How Hawaii Cities Route Arrest Records
Each city on this page sits inside a county. The county holds the booking jail, the court, and the police records office. Small cities often share a police district with a larger neighbor. Makakilo and Royal Kunia share patrol staff with the wider Kapolei and Wahiawa districts. Ocean Pointe and Ewa Gentry share District 8 coverage with Kapolei and Ewa Beach. Mililani Town and Mililani Mauka share District 2 coverage with Wahiawa. These shared routes mean a single records request at the main district station can pull data for several cities at once.
Walk-in records service is open at most Oahu district stations during business hours. Maui and Hawaii County records offices also take walk-in requests. Phone calls work for general info but not for old log copies. Written requests by mail or email are the standard path for full records requests. Each city page on this site lists the right contact for that city's records request.
Each city page also links back to its parent county page. Use those links to see a fuller set of local contacts. The county pages also hold more links to state-level tools. A city page holds the tight local view. A county page holds the wider view.
The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu sits at the top of the records chain for every city. HCJDC runs the state's criminal history file. It answers name checks from any city. Phone: (808) 587-3279.
City Page Layout and Tools
Each city page on this site follows the same layout. The top of the page shows the local police station, its address, and its phone number. The next section covers the booking jail and how to look up an inmate held there. After that comes a section on the daily arrest log. The court section lists the court that hears misdemeanor cases and the one that hears felonies. The records request section shows fees, forms, and the response time under UIPA.
Each city page also lists the conviction record path. The eCrim portal and HCJDC Public Access Sites work the same for every city. A walk-in print at a Public Access Site runs $25 cash. An online eCrim search runs $5 per search. An official record runs $12. Paper name checks at HCJDC cost $30. Fingerprint checks cost $55.
Pick the city page that fits your search. Follow the links to state tools for the latest custody status. Use the local contacts for older records or full case files. The mix of local and state resources gives you the fastest path to the right jail mugshot or arrest record.