Search Fayetteville Police Records
Fayetteville police records cover every arrest, incident report, and accident report taken by the Fayetteville Police Department inside city limits. To find Fayetteville police records, start at the records division or use the online portals the city runs for FOIA and report requests. Most reports are ready in a few days. Fayetteville is in Washington County, so arrests made by the county sheriff outside city limits go through the Sheriff's Office instead. This page shows the records unit hours, fees, and direct links to Fayetteville police records request tools.
Fayetteville Police Records Overview
Fayetteville Police Records Division
The Fayetteville Police Department is at 1800 N. Stephen Carr Memorial Blvd., Fayetteville, AR 72704. The main phone is 479-587-3565. Records are open Monday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. (open during lunch). Records staff handle incident reports, accident reports, arrest records, and FOIA requests for the city. Fayetteville police records are public under the Arkansas Freedom of Information Act with the usual exemptions for ongoing investigations and juvenile files.
Police reports are usually ready within five working days. Warrants Division: 479-575-8344 (M-F 7-4). Hot Check Division: 479-575-8254. District Court: 479-587-3590. Accident reports cannot be faxed. Under Arkansas law, all accident reports must be made available to the public. Names of minors involved are redacted. For the most up-to-date Fayetteville police records process, call ahead or check the department's website. Walk-in requests work for basic records. Longer or more complex requests may need a written form with a case number, date, and names of the parties.
Accident reports cost $10 in person at the police department and $15 online through Lexis Nexis. Case reports and incident reports are FREE.
How to Request Fayetteville Police Records
A clear Fayetteville police records request speeds things up. Give the subject's full name, date of birth, date and time of the incident, location, and the case or report number if you have it. You can drop off a request at the records counter, mail it in, or use the online portal if the city runs one. Under Arkansas Code § 25-19-105, the custodian has three working days to reply. Proof of Arkansas residency may be asked up front.
Fees for Fayetteville police records follow the actual cost of reproduction. Plain copies usually run $0.25 per page. Certified copies cost more, often $2 to $5 per document. Audio and video records may carry a per-hour staff fee if redaction takes time. If the estimated cost will top $25, the city can ask for prepayment under § 25-19-105(d)(3)(A)(iii). The Fayetteville FOIA portal is at fayetteville-ar.justfoia.com/publicportal.
Note: Case numbers and incident dates help the Fayetteville records clerk pull the right file fast. Broad or vague requests slow down the reply.
Fayetteville Police Records Portals
Fayetteville keeps online portals that help the public find police records. The screenshots below show the main resources and where they live online.
The Fayetteville Police Department records FAQ page lays out the accident report and incident report process. Source: fayetteville-ar.gov/m/faq?cat=21.

The page covers fees, hours, and what info you need to include with a Fayetteville police records request.
Fayetteville Accident and Crash Reports
Accident reports taken by Fayetteville police are public under Arkansas law. Most city departments charge a small fee for a copy. For crashes taken by the Arkansas State Police on an interstate or state highway inside city limits, the state holds the central crash file at crashreports.ark.org. Reports are ready about ten business days after the crash. The fee is $10 for drivers and owners, $25 for third parties.
Many Arkansas cities also use BuyCrash run by LexisNexis for online crash report downloads. Select Arkansas, then the city police department, then search by report number or driver last name plus date. Insurance adjusters and attorneys often use the same portal. Have the report number on the exchange-of-information slip the officer gave you.
Fayetteville FOIA Rules
Arkansas FOIA is codified at Arkansas Code § 25-19-105. The requester must be a citizen of Arkansas under § 25-19-105(a)(1)(A). The custodian has three working days to respond. Records open to the public include arrest logs, incident reports, accident reports, mugshots, warrants served, and jail bookings. Exemptions include ongoing investigations under § 25-19-105(b)(6), juvenile records, undercover officer identities, and concealed handgun license data.
The Attorney General's FOIA Handbook is the go-to guide for Arkansas records requests. It lives on the AG's site at arkansasag.gov. Call the FOIA Hotline at 1-800-482-8982 if a Fayetteville records request is not answered on time. If the city denies a Fayetteville police records request, you can appeal to the district or circuit court where the records are held.
Most routine Fayetteville police records are released after a simple review. Sensitive information such as victim names in sex offense cases, social security numbers, and minor personal data is redacted before release. Juvenile records and sealed cases are not released under state law.
Washington County Police Records
Fayetteville sits in Washington County. For arrests made by the Washington County Sheriff's Office in unincorporated areas outside Fayetteville, records live with the sheriff, not the city. The county runs its own jail and inmate roster. See the Washington County police records page for the sheriff's contact info, FOIA process, jail lookup, and court record links.
Court cases tied to Fayetteville arrests end up with the Washington County Circuit Clerk once formal charges are filed. You can search the same cases online for free through Arkansas CourtConnect. Search by party name, case ID, or case number to see charges, hearing dates, motions filed, and final disposition. The Arkansas Public Index is a second way to reach the same case data.
Fayetteville Background Checks
Fayetteville residents can ask for a local criminal history check at the city police records counter. That local check pulls from Fayetteville Police Department files only. For a full Arkansas check, use the Arkansas State Police online background system at cbc.ark.org or the ARCH public portal at ark.org/asp/arch. Name-based state checks are $22. ARCH searches are $24 each.
For national coverage, the Arkansas State Police Identification Bureau runs FBI fingerprint-based checks. Fill out ASP Form 122 and include payment with a signed release from the subject. The state sex offender registry is maintained by the Arkansas Crime Information Center. Public search is free by name, address, ZIP code, or county.
Fayetteville Jail and Inmate Records
Most people arrested in Fayetteville are booked into the Washington County jail rather than a city lockup. The county sheriff runs the detention center for the whole county. The jail roster usually posts online with booking date, charges, bond amount, and mugshot. Family members can call the sheriff for inmate status updates and visitation rules.
For inmates who move to state custody after sentencing, the Arkansas Department of Corrections inmate search is the next stop. The file updates each Monday and works by ADC number, name, age, race, county, facility, or offense. Victim notifications work through VINELink at vinelink.com for both state and county transfers.
Fayetteville Police Records Tips
A few things speed up a Fayetteville police records request. Bring the case number or incident number if you have it. Give the full name of everyone involved. List the date, time, and address of the incident. If an officer gave you a business card at the scene, the name and badge number help the records clerk pull the file.
Closed-case records are usually released within a few business days. Older Fayetteville records may take longer if they sit in the archive. Some specialized files such as internal affairs records or use of force reports have extra review before release. If a Fayetteville police records request is denied, you can appeal to the district or circuit court, and the appeal is usually fast.
Nearby Cities with Police Records
Other Arkansas cities near Fayetteville have their own police records pages on this site. Pick a city below for local records info.