Waynesboro White Pages Search
The Waynesboro White Pages bring together the public record sources you need to find a person, a case, or a property in this small Shenandoah Valley city. Look up court files, deeds, voter info, and police reports through City of Waynesboro offices and the Commonwealth of Virginia. Each office runs its own files. Most lookups are free. Use the search box on this page to start a White Pages people search, or jump to one of the city offices below for direct access. The clerk and the commissioner are open on weekdays.
Waynesboro White Pages Overview
Waynesboro Circuit Court White Pages
The Waynesboro Circuit Court Clerk's Office is the main hub for court files in the city. The clerk holds case files, land records, marriage licenses, and probate papers. Public access is open during weekday business hours. Most court files in Virginia are open under Virginia Code § 17.1-208. The clerk's office is the right first stop for any people search tied to a court case in Waynesboro.
Waynesboro is part of the 25th Judicial Circuit of Virginia. The same circuit also serves the city of Staunton and Augusta County. Land records can be searched in person by name, by deed book and page, or by parcel ID. The clerk also issues marriage licenses to couples who plan to wed in the city. Bring a photo ID for any in person record request.
Statewide case data for Waynesboro flows through the Virginia Courts Online Case Information portal. Pick Waynesboro Circuit Court from the dropdown, then run a name or case number search. The portal is free. It shows party names, hearing dates, charges, and final rulings. The Waynesboro General District Court hears smaller civil cases and traffic matters and can also be searched through the same statewide tool.
The Virginia Judicial System site is the front door for nearly every court record search in the state. View the Virginia Judicial System hub for forms, court lists, and direct phone numbers.
Use it as a starting point before you head to the Waynesboro clerk's office.
Note: Waynesboro became an independent city in 1948 and shares court and circuit ties with both Augusta County and the city of Staunton just to the west.
Waynesboro Real Estate White Pages
The Waynesboro Commissioner of the Revenue assesses real estate and personal property in the city. Assessment records and tax info are open to the public. The office is the right place to look up the value of a home or business in Waynesboro. Property owners can also pick up tax forms and ask about exemptions and relief programs.
Real estate data is one of the strongest White Pages tools in Waynesboro. A name on a deed gives you a current address, a sale price, and a parcel ID. From there you can pull the prior owners and the lot size. Virginia Code § 58.1-3201 says all real property in the state must be assessed at fair market value. Virginia Code § 58.1-3122.2 lets the city share that data online for free public use.
The Online Case Information portal pairs well with deed data when you are running a full White Pages check on a Waynesboro resident. Open the case search tool and pick the right local court.
Cross check a name from a deed against any court matters with one short query.
Voter and Vital Records in Waynesboro
Voter records for Waynesboro residents sit with the Virginia Department of Elections Citizen Portal. The site is free. Sign in with your name, date of birth, and the last four of your social. The portal can show your polling place, registration status, and voting history. The Waynesboro General Registrar runs the local elections office. Voter rolls are kept under Virginia Code § 24.2-428.2.
Birth and death records for people born or who died in Waynesboro are held at the Virginia Department of Health Office of Vital Records. A copy of any vital record costs $12. Birth records open to the public 100 years after the event. Death, marriage, and divorce files open 25 years after the event. Before that, only immediate family with valid ID can get a copy. The city clerk holds marriage licenses for couples who applied in Waynesboro.
Waynesboro FOIA and Business Search
Public records in Waynesboro are open under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, found at Virginia Code § 2.2-3700. The city must reply to a FOIA request within five working days. If staff cannot respond in that time, they can take seven more days, for 12 total. You do not have to give a reason. You just need to be a Virginia resident or a member of the media. Common exemptions sit at Virginia Code § 2.2-3705.1.
Business filings tied to Waynesboro firms are held by the Virginia State Corporation Commission. The SCC's CIS Online tool lets you pull up a company name to see its registered agent, filing date, and current status. This is useful when you want to find the people behind a local business or confirm a firm is in good standing with the state.
Note: A wider White Pages check on a Waynesboro resident often pulls files from Augusta County and the city of Staunton, since the three share courts and the 25th Circuit.
Other Waynesboro White Pages Tools
The Waynesboro Sheriff's Office serves civil process for the Circuit Court and runs court security. Its records are tied to court files held by the clerk. The Waynesboro Treasurer collects city taxes and may have data on tax delinquent parcels. The Waynesboro Police Department also runs records for incident reports and arrests in city limits. All three offices can fill in gaps that the clerk and the commissioner of the revenue do not cover on their own.
For older land records and historic deeds in Waynesboro, the clerk's office has paper indexes that go back many decades. Many files were also kept by Augusta County before Waynesboro became an independent city in 1948. Plan to spend a bit of time at the courthouse if you are doing family research or chasing a chain of title. Staff can help point you to the right deed book and page if you bring a name and a rough date.
The Waynesboro Public Library keeps a local history room with directories, old phone books, and microfilm of city papers. These can be a back door into a White Pages style search when no online file is to be found. The Library of Virginia in Richmond keeps even older records, including files for both Waynesboro and Augusta County. Both are free to use for the public.
Sex offender records for the Waynesboro area are kept by the Virginia State Police. The state runs a free registry that you can search by name, zip code, or city. It is updated as new offenders are added or removed under state rules. This is a key step in any full White Pages safety check tied to a Waynesboro home address.