Search Floyd County People Records

Floyd County people search records are managed through offices in New Albany, the county seat. This southern Indiana county sits along the Ohio River and has about 79,000 residents. The clerk, recorder, and courts all keep public records that can help you find information on a person. New Albany handles all court filings and property records for the entire county. Under Indiana law, most of these files are open to anyone who asks.

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Floyd County Quick Facts

79,000 Population
New Albany County Seat
22nd Judicial Circuit
Free Court Search

Floyd County Clerk's Office

The Floyd County Clerk is the first place to go for court-related people search records. The office is inside the City-County Building at 311 Hauss Square in New Albany. Staff keep civil, criminal, family, and small claims files. Each one has names and dates tied to the people involved. You can walk in and ask to search records during business hours.

Bring what you know. A full name gives the best results. A date of birth or case number narrows things down fast. Staff can pull records and make copies for you on the spot. Certified copies cost more than plain ones. The fees depend on the type of document and the number of pages. Call ahead to check current prices so you know what to expect when you arrive.

Floyd County is part of the 22nd Judicial Circuit, which also includes Clark and Scott Counties. But Floyd County cases go through the Floyd County clerk in New Albany. You do not need to go to another county to find Floyd County records. The circuit structure just means the same judges may serve more than one county.

Office Floyd County Clerk
Address 311 Hauss Square, Room 225, New Albany, IN 47150
Phone 812-948-5411
Hours Monday - Friday, 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Court Records Search in Floyd County

MyCase is the fastest way to search court records in Floyd County from home. Indiana runs this free tool for all 92 counties. You type in a name and see every case tied to that person. Results cover civil suits, criminal charges, traffic violations, and small claims. Each entry shows the filing date, case type, and current status.

Use it at public.courts.in.gov/mycase. Select Floyd County from the list or search the whole state at once. No account is needed. No fee applies. The data comes straight from the courts and is updated often. This is the tool most people use for a Floyd County people search because it is quick, free, and shows a lot of detail.

Indiana state records portal for Floyd County people search

The screenshot above shows one of the state-level tools available for searching Indiana public records alongside local Floyd County resources.

If you need records that are not in MyCase, visit the clerk's office. Some older filings or paper-only documents may not show up online. The courthouse in New Albany has full case files going back many years. Staff can help you locate what you need.

Floyd County Property Records

Property records are a strong way to find people. They show who owns homes and land in Floyd County. The Recorder's Office keeps deeds, mortgages, liens, and other land documents. The Assessor tracks property values and owner names. Both offices are in the City-County Building in New Albany.

You can search property records by owner name, address, or parcel number. Deed records show when property changed hands, who sold it, and who bought it. Mortgage records show lender and borrower names. Lien records can reveal debts tied to a property. All of this data is public under IC 5-14-3 and helps connect people to places in Floyd County.

For tax and assessment data, the Floyd County Assessor can pull records by owner name. This confirms where someone lives or what property they hold. Assessment records include the property value, tax amount, and legal description. Combined with recorder data, you get a complete view of property ties in the county.

State Resources for Floyd County

Several state databases extend a Floyd County people search beyond local records. The Indiana State Police offers a criminal history check at in.gov/isp/criminal-history-services. This pulls from a statewide database of arrests and convictions. A fee applies for formal reports.

The IDOC offender locator at in.gov/idoc/facilities/offender-locator is free. Search by name to find current or past state inmates. Results list the facility, offense, and sentence dates. The sex and violent offender registry adds another layer. It shows registered offenders by location. The statewide jail booking site at public.indianajail.gov covers recent bookings in Floyd County and beyond.

These tools fill gaps that local court records may not cover. A person could have a case in Floyd County but serve time in a state facility elsewhere. Checking both local and state sources gives you a more complete result.

Public Access Law in Floyd County

Indiana's Access to Public Records Act is at IC 5-14-3. It covers all Floyd County offices. The rule is that government records are open. You can ask for them. The office must hand them over or explain why it cannot. If they refuse, they have to cite the exact legal exception in writing.

Court files, property deeds, and assessment records are all open. Sealed cases and some juvenile records are the main exceptions. Records tied to active police work may be restricted for a time. But the default is public access. You do not need to give a reason for your request. If a denial happens, the Indiana Public Access Counselor can review your complaint and push for the release of records.

Floyd County Vital Records

Birth and death records for Floyd County can be requested from the Indiana Department of Health at in.gov/health/vital-records. The local health department in New Albany may help with some requests as well. Vital records have more restrictions than court or property files. Birth certificates are limited to the person named, a parent, or a legal representative. Death records are more broadly available.

Fees apply for certified copies. The state office handles most requests by mail or online. Processing times vary. For a people search, vital records can confirm identity or verify facts that other records may not show. But they serve a narrower purpose than court or property data.

Tips for Floyd County People Search

Start online with MyCase. It costs nothing and covers all case types in Floyd County. If the person has any court history here, it will show up. Next, check property records at the recorder's office. Land ties can tell you where someone lives even if they have no court cases on file.

Floyd County sits right across the river from Louisville, Kentucky. People move back and forth between the two states regularly. If your search turns up nothing in Floyd County, the person may have records in Kentucky instead. Keep that in mind for border area searches. Locally, combining MyCase with the assessor and recorder data gives you the best chance of finding what you need.

  • MyCase for court records: free, covers all case types
  • Clerk's office in New Albany: 812-948-5411
  • Recorder for deeds and mortgages
  • State tools: ISP, IDOC, jail bookings

Note: Floyd County sits across the Ohio River from Louisville, Kentucky, so some residents may also have records filed in Kentucky courts.

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Cities in Floyd County

New Albany is the largest city in Floyd County with about 37,500 residents. It serves as the county seat and the location of all county offices. Smaller communities like Georgetown and Greenville also fall under Floyd County's record system. All court and property filings go through the offices in New Albany.

Nearby Counties

These counties border Floyd County. If a person has ties to more than one area, check the neighboring counties as well. Each one keeps its own court and property records filed separately.