Fairfield County People Search

Fairfield County people search tools let you look up public records for nearly one million residents in southwestern Connecticut. This is the most populous county in the state, and it spans from Greenwich on the New York border to Shelton in the north. Because Connecticut ended county government in 1960, all records in Fairfield County sit with individual town clerks and state agencies. You can still search for people across this region by using court records, vital records, voter data, and professional license databases that cover every town in Fairfield County.

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Fairfield County Quick Facts

975,000 Population
23 Towns
169 State Towns Total
1666 Year Established

Fairfield County Public Records Access

Connecticut is the only state in New England that got rid of county government. That happened in 1960. So there is no Fairfield County clerk or Fairfield County courthouse. Instead, each of the 23 towns in Fairfield County has its own town clerk who keeps vital records, land records, and other public files. If you want to find someone in Fairfield County, you need to know which town they live in or use a statewide search tool.

Town clerks in Fairfield County hold birth, death, and marriage records for events that took place in their town. Death records and marriage records are open to the public. Birth records less than 100 years old are restricted under state law. Only the person named on the certificate, their parents, spouse, children over 18, or grandparents can get a copy. Under CT Gen Stat § 1-210, all other public records kept by any town in Fairfield County must be open for inspection during normal hours. Copy fees for municipal records in Fairfield County top out at 50 cents per page, as set by CT Gen Stat § 1-212.

The Western Connecticut Council of Governments now serves the planning role that Fairfield County government once filled. WestCOG coordinates land use, transit, and regional data across towns in this area. Their office is at 1 Riverside Road, Sandy Hook, CT 06482. You can reach them at (203) 304-9086.

The WestCOG website offers a look at how local planning works across Fairfield County towns.

Western Connecticut Council of Governments website for Fairfield County people search

This regional body helps connect towns in Fairfield County but does not hold individual public records.

Search Fairfield County Court Records

Court records are one of the best ways to find people in Fairfield County. Connecticut courts run by judicial district, not by county. Several judicial districts serve Fairfield County, including Fairfield, Stamford-Norwalk, and Danbury. Each one handles criminal, civil, and family cases for the towns in its area.

The Connecticut Judicial Branch runs free online search tools. The criminal case lookup lets you search by name to find convictions in any court that serves Fairfield County. Records go back up to 10 years. The site shows the charge, court date, and outcome. Juvenile and youthful offender cases do not show up. The civil case inquiry tool covers lawsuits, family matters, and housing cases filed in Fairfield County courts. Both tools are free to use and do not need an account.

For people search in Fairfield County, court records can give you a name, case type, and the court where the case was filed. That alone can help you confirm someone lives or lived in the area. If you need more detail from a case, you can contact the clerk at the court that handled it.

Note: Criminal records shown on the state site may change daily due to erasures, corrections, and pardons.

Vital Records in Fairfield County

Vital records in Fairfield County come from two places. Each town clerk keeps records for events in that town. The Connecticut Department of Public Health keeps state copies from July 1897 to the present. If you need a death or marriage record for a Fairfield County resident, you can ask the town where the event took place or call the state office at (860) 509-7700.

Town clerks in Fairfield County charge $20 for a certified copy. The state charges $30. Some people use vital records to confirm a person's identity or find their last known town. Death records are fully open. Marriage records are also public. Birth records have the 100-year rule, which limits who can get a copy. These limits come from state law and apply across all of Fairfield County.

Fairfield County People Lookup Tools

Two more state databases can help with a people search in Fairfield County. The Connecticut eLicense portal lets you search over 850 types of professional licenses. You can look up a person by name and see if they hold a license in Fairfield County or anywhere in the state. The data updates in real time. It covers doctors, nurses, real estate agents, contractors, and many more fields. This is a primary source for checking someone's credentials.

Voter registration is another way to find people in Fairfield County. The MyVote CT portal lets you check if someone is registered to vote. You need their name and town. The tool can confirm a current address in Fairfield County if the person is on the rolls. It will not show full personal details, but it helps verify where someone lives.

Note: The eLicense portal does not need a registration or fee to search.

Fairfield County Property Records

Land records in Fairfield County stay with each town clerk. There is no county recorder. The Connecticut Town Clerks Portal gives online access to indexed land records from many towns in Fairfield County. You can search deeds, mortgages, liens, and other documents. If a person owns property in Fairfield County, these records will show their name and the town where the property sits.

Property records are a strong tool for people search in Fairfield County. They show the buyer, seller, and property address. Many records go back decades or even centuries. Staff at town clerk offices cannot do title searching for you, but they can point you to the right index books or online systems. Fees for copies run about $1 per page in the office or $2 per page online. Some towns in Fairfield County also post GIS maps and assessor data on their own websites, which can help you tie a name to an address.

Fairfield County Freedom of Information

If a town in Fairfield County turns down your records request, you have options. The Connecticut Freedom of Information Commission hears appeals from people who were denied access to public records. Under CT Gen Stat § 1-206, you must file your complaint within 30 days. The Commission can order the town to release the records. Civil penalties of up to $1,000 can apply for violations.

No form is needed to ask for records. Just tell the town office what you want. They must give you prompt access. If they charge more than 50 cents a page for copies, that may break the law. The FOI Commission can be reached at 1-866-374-3617. They cannot get the records for you, but they can force a town in Fairfield County to follow the rules. Some records are exempt, including personnel files, certain law enforcement files, and adoption records. For most people search needs in Fairfield County, the records you want will be open to the public.

Probate Records in Fairfield County

Probate records can help with a people search when someone has passed away or has estate matters in Fairfield County. Connecticut probate courts run by district, not by county. Several probate districts cover towns in Fairfield County. The Connecticut Probate Court website lets you find the right district for any town.

Online probate records go back to January 2011 for estate and trust cases. Access is limited. Only interested parties and their lawyers can view full case documents. Self-represented people must request access and will get a code by mail. For older probate records in Fairfield County, you may need to visit the probate court in person or check with the Connecticut State Library.

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Cities in Fairfield County

Fairfield County has 23 towns and cities. The ones listed below have their own people search pages with local details. All towns in Fairfield County keep records through their own town clerk. Divorce, civil, and criminal cases go through the judicial districts that serve this part of the state.

Other towns in Fairfield County include Weston, Wilton, New Canaan, Darien, Monroe, Easton, Redding, Bethel, Brookfield, Sherman, and New Fairfield. These towns keep their own records through their town clerks.

Nearby Counties

These counties border Fairfield County. If you are searching for someone and not sure which area they live in, check nearby counties too. The same state search tools work across all Connecticut counties.