Oklahoma County Traffic Court Records
Oklahoma County traffic court records are filed at the District Court in Oklahoma City and handled by Court Clerk Rick Warren. The county is the most populous in Oklahoma and sees a high volume of traffic cases. District court handles tickets from the Oklahoma Highway Patrol, county sheriff, and university police. Oklahoma City traffic citations go to the Oklahoma City Municipal Court, not the district court. Online records for Oklahoma County are available exclusively through OSCN. The county does not participate in ODCR. This page explains where to find records, how to pay, and what to expect.
Oklahoma County Overview
Oklahoma County Court Clerk Office
Court Clerk Rick Warren runs the Oklahoma County District Court Clerk's office. The office is at 320 Robert S. Kerr Avenue, Room 500, Oklahoma City, OK 73102. This is where all district court traffic records are stored and where you go for in-person requests. The clerk handles civil, criminal, traffic, probate, and family court matters for the entire county. The volume of cases here is much higher than in smaller counties, so give yourself extra time for in-person visits.
The Oklahoma County Court Clerk page has current office information and contact details. You can also find information about traffic tickets specifically at the traffic tickets page. That page explains what types of tickets go through the district court and how to pay them.
| Court Clerk | Rick Warren |
|---|---|
| Address | 320 Robert S. Kerr Avenue, Room 500, Oklahoma City, OK 73102 |
| Traffic Court | 9:00 AM, Room 101 (Jury Assembly Room), 1st Floor |
| Ticket Types | Highway Patrol, County Sheriff, University Police |
| Payment | Cash, cashier's check, money order (payable to Rick Warren Court Clerk) |
Which Traffic Tickets Go to Oklahoma County District Court
Not all traffic tickets in the Oklahoma City metro area go to the same court. The Oklahoma County District Court handles tickets written by specific agencies. Highway Patrol tickets, county sheriff tickets, and university police tickets are all processed through the district court clerk at 320 Robert S. Kerr Avenue. If a ticket came from one of those agencies, your case is at the district court.
Municipal tickets are different. If a city police officer in Oklahoma City, Edmond, or Midwest City wrote the ticket, that case goes to the municipal court for that specific city. Municipal courts are separate from the district court and have their own records, hearing schedules, and payment systems. Oklahoma City Municipal Court, Edmond Municipal Court, and Midwest City Municipal Court all operate independently. Do not go to the district court if your ticket came from a city police officer.
Traffic court hearings at Oklahoma County District Court start at 9:00 AM in Room 101 on the first floor. Court appearances are at 320 Robert S. Kerr Avenue. If you want to pay by credit card, you must be present at the courthouse. The clerk does not accept credit card payments by phone or online at the district court level. Mail payments should be sent to 320 Robert S Kerr Ave, Room 500, Oklahoma City, OK 73102. Mail-in payments must be a cashier's check or money order made out to Rick Warren Court Clerk.
Note: Oklahoma County does not participate in ODCR. All online record access for Oklahoma County is through OSCN only.
Search Oklahoma County Traffic Court Records Online
Oklahoma County traffic court records are available online through OSCN, the Oklahoma State Courts Network. OSCN is the only online portal for Oklahoma County district court records. The county does not use ODCR. Search the OSCN docket system by defendant name or case number. You can view charges, docket entries, hearing dates, and final dispositions for free.
To pay a traffic fine online, use the OSCN E-Payments portal. Find the case, verify the details, and pay by card. This is the only online payment option for Oklahoma County district court traffic cases. You do not need to go to the courthouse to use it. Save your confirmation after payment.
Oklahoma County land records are separate from court records. Property documents like deeds and mortgages are available at okcountyrecords.com. That system does not cover traffic or criminal cases from the district court.
Oklahoma County Traffic Court Resources
The Oklahoma County traffic tickets page is the official source for payment instructions, court schedules, and ticket type distinctions.
The main Oklahoma County Court Clerk page covers all court clerk functions and contact information.
Land and property records are searchable at okcountyrecords.com.
Traffic Points and Driving Record Impact
Traffic convictions in Oklahoma County go on your state driving record through the Department of Public Safety. Oklahoma's point system works the same here as in every other county. Accumulate 10 or more points in a 5-year period and you can face license suspension. That applies whether your case was at the district court or a municipal court in the county.
Standard point values: reckless driving is 4 points. Speeding 11 to 25 mph over the limit is 2 points. Speeding 26 to 40 mph over is 3 points. Speeding 41 mph or more over the limit is 4 points. School zone and construction zone fines double under state law. Review the full statute at Oklahoma Title 47, Section 11-801e. A conviction for a serious violation in Oklahoma County can affect your insurance rates, your CDL status if you have one, and your ability to keep a valid license.
Cities in Oklahoma County
Oklahoma County includes several large cities. Each city's police department issues tickets that go to that city's municipal court, not the district court. District court handles Highway Patrol, county sheriff, and university police citations.
Nearby Counties
Oklahoma County is in the center of the state. These neighboring counties each have their own district court traffic record systems.