← All statesPublic Record · Open
File · County · Open
Hocking County, Ohio
Essentials
17
Total sources
23
Guided record check
Run this in order.
Start with the systems most likely to change your read of a person. Then cross-check custody, registries, and paper-trail sources before you go wider.
Case file · 39073
0 of 17 essentials reviewed
0% open
Deeper directory: 0/6 reviewed
01 · The docket layer
Start with courts
1 source
Run county and statewide court portals first. Civil, criminal, family, and lower-court systems are often separate, so this is where most missed records happen.
Start with courts
1 entry
02 · Current risk signals
Check custody and registries
2 sources
Use jail, corrections, and registry systems to catch records that do not show up in a normal court search.
Check custody and registries
2 entries
STATERegistry
Ohio Attorney General eSORN — Sex Offender RegistryOhio's statewide sex offender registry. Covers all 88 counties — each county sheriff feeds the system. Search by name or by geographic radius around an address. Public, no login.
Free
Open ↗If you are vetting someone in Ohio, this is the first registry to check. The address-radius search is the version to use when you only have a partial picture: enter an address, get every registered offender within a mile. Names search returns current address, work address, and vehicle info. The registry is fed by all 88 county sheriff offices, so coverage is statewide and updates in near-real-time.
03 · Context and corroboration
Pull the paper trail
11 sources
Recorder, assessor, prosecutor, records-request, and licensing sources help verify addresses, liens, ownership, agency records, and local context.
Pull the paper trail
11 entries
STATEOther
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction — Offender SearchODRC Offender Search covers anyone currently incarcerated in Ohio state prison, currently under Department supervision, or judicially released. Search by last name alone, first plus last, or offender number with prefix (A or R for male, W for female).
Free
Open ↗State prison only. If you suspect someone served time in a county jail, use the county sheriff inmate roster instead. The search shows last recorded address, not current location, so a release-and-relocate combo can leave the record looking fresh when the person has moved on. Records persist after release, so this is also where you confirm whether someone in your life has a state prison history.
STATEBusiness
Ohio Secretary of State — Business Entity SearchOhio SOS Business Search. Direct search by business name with filters for All, Active, Cancelled, or Dead status. Returns entity type, registered agent, filing history, and officers/incorporators where filed.
Free
Open ↗If someone has told you they own a business in Ohio, this is where you confirm it. Filter on Cancelled and Dead too: a long list of dissolved entities tied to the same registered agent or officer is a pattern worth knowing. The free monthly business reports list new filings, trademarks, and dissolutions, useful for tracking activity over time.
STATEVoter
Ohio Voter Lookup — Secretary of StateOhio Secretary of State statewide voter registration lookup. Returns current registration status, polling location, and voting district. Address verification is the primary use here.
Free
Open ↗Voter rolls are one of the most reliable address-of-record sources in any state. If someone is registered to vote in Ohio, this returns where the state mailed them their last ballot. Useful for confirming an address you suspect, or for catching a move you were not told about. The lookup is statewide; for additional polling and ballot detail, also check the county Board of Elections row.
STATELicensing
eLicense Ohio — Professional License LookupOhio's primary unified professional license verification system. Covers most licensed professions including counselors, social workers, marriage and family therapists, nurses, and many others through participating regulatory boards. Returns license status and disciplinary history where on file.
Free
Open ↗If someone tells you they are licensed in Ohio in a regulated profession, this is your verification. Beyond license status, the lookup surfaces disciplinary actions, which is the more useful signal: suspensions, revocations, or restrictions. Note the system migrated for the Real Estate division in January 2026 to a new vendor, so realtor lookups may surface separately under the Department of Commerce. Attorneys are licensed by the Supreme Court of Ohio (separate registry), not eLicense.
STATEVital
Ohio Department of Health — Bureau of Vital StatisticsOhio Department of Health Bureau of Vital Statistics. State office holds birth records since 1908-12-20 and death records since 1972-01-01. Earlier records live at the Probate Court of the county where the event occurred. $21.50 search fee per record (charged whether or not located).
$21.50 per record search
Open ↗The fee is per-search, not per-found-record, so confirm the right county and event date before paying. Online ordering was temporarily unavailable as of May 2026 due to a system upgrade; mail and in-person paths still work. Over 100 local offices statewide accept in-person same-day requests, often the fastest path. For pre-1972 deaths or pre-1908 births, skip ODH and go directly to the Probate Court of the county where the event occurred.
STATELicensing
Supreme Court of Ohio — Attorney DirectoryThe Supreme Court of Ohio licenses and disciplines attorneys (eLicense does NOT cover lawyers). Search by name, registration number, or geographic location. Returns attorney status (active, suspended, retired) and a summary of any disciplinary action taken by the Court.
Free
Open ↗If you have ever been told someone is a lawyer in Ohio, run the name here. Status alone is the easy part. The harder part is the disciplinary summary: this directory shows when the Court has issued a sanction. For deeper history including pending cases and full opinions, go to the Office of Disciplinary Counsel at odc.ohio.gov. The Board of Professional Conduct online docket also tracks active cases.
04 · Outside the county
Run the federal backstop
3 sources
Federal court and incarceration systems sit outside local portals. Run them before you decide the search is clean.
Run the federal backstop
3 entries
FEDERALCourt
PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records)Federal District, Appeals, and Bankruptcy courts. Over 1 billion documents filed. $0.10/page (capped at $3.00/document); free if quarterly charges under $30. Account required for search. Confirmed live 2026-05-03.
Per-page fee, often waived under $30/quarter
Open ↗PACER catches federal cases the state DOC and state courts will not. Account required, small per-search fees. Worth using for white-collar, federal drug, immigration, and bankruptcy.
FEDERALCorrections
Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate LocatorAll federal prison inmates, current and historical from 1982. Search by name (with race/sex/age filters) or inmate number. Note: search backend showed intermittent error during 2026-05-03 verification — likely temporary. If main tool is down, try https://www.bop.gov/mobile/find_inmate/byname.jsp as fallback.
Free
Open ↗Free, fast, includes alias search. Use whenever the state DOC comes up empty and you suspect federal involvement.
FEDERALRegistry
National Sex Offender Public Website (NSOPW)All 50 states aggregated, plus DC, US territories, and tribal nations. Search by name or location. DOJ-operated. Named after Dru Sjodin. Also links to abuse reporting resources. Confirmed live 2026-05-03.
Free
Open ↗Cross-state coverage in one search. Run after the state-level registry to catch out-of-state moves.