How to Find Your Probation Officer in 2026
Find your probation officer fast. State DOC directories, federal USPO districts, victim notification systems, and case-number lookups for 2026.

Losing your probation officer's contact info happens more often than you'd think. Maybe the paperwork went through the wash, the phone died, or the office moved without telling anyone. Whatever the reason, you need a name and a phone number — and you usually need it before your next check-in deadline.
The good news? Every state in the country, plus the federal system, runs a public-facing way to look up probation officers. The bad news is that no single website covers all of them. Texas, Georgia, and Ohio's Franklin County each have their own portals. The federal courts maintain a separate directory called the U.S. Probation and Pretrial Services. Victims and family members trying to identify an offender's PO have yet another route, through statewide notification programs like VINE and SAVIN.
This guide walks through every legitimate channel — for probationers, victims, attorneys, and concerned relatives. You'll learn what each lookup actually returns, what's free, what costs nothing but a phone call, and which channels won't ask for personal information you'd rather not give. No staff rosters or named officers appear here, only the process. Most lookups take under five minutes once you know where to start.
Probation Officer Lookups: By the Numbers
Before you start clicking around random websites, get one thing in writing: your case number. Without it, most state systems will either refuse the lookup or hand you a generic county office number that nobody answers. Your case number lives on your sentencing paperwork, your release packet, or — if you've already lost both — at the courthouse where you were sentenced. A quick call to the clerk's office gets you that number in minutes, no questions asked.
Now, there are basically three reasons someone runs a PO lookup. You might be on probation and need your own officer's contact info after losing it. You might be a victim or victim's family, trying to confirm the offender in your case is being supervised and by whom. Or you might be an attorney, bail bondsman, or relative helping someone navigate the system. Each path uses different tools, so figuring out which group you fall into saves a ton of time.
One thing to keep in mind: probation officer assignments change. Caseloads shift, officers retire, transfers happen quietly. Even if you confirmed your PO two months ago, that doesn't mean the assignment still holds. When in doubt, call the local probation office during business hours and ask them to verify the current officer attached to your case number. They will not give out an officer's mobile number, but they will confirm assignment and patch you through to the office line.

Three Things to Have Ready Before You Look
- Case or docket number — usually a year prefix plus 6–8 digits (e.g. 2024-CR-001234). This is the single most important piece of info.
- Sentencing county or district — federal probationers need to know which of the 94 districts they fall under. State probationers need the sentencing county.
- Full legal name as it appears on court records — nicknames and middle-name-only entries trip up most search tools.
If you don't have a case number, skip to the courthouse clerk method below. That's the only reliable workaround.
State-run online directories have come a long way in the past decade. Most states now offer at least a partial public-facing lookup that lets you confirm someone is on probation and which county or district office supervises them. A handful of states go further, exposing the assigned officer's name and direct office line. Others stop at the office level and require a phone call to drill down to the individual.
Texas runs TDCJ Offender Information Search, which returns parole and probation status when you enter a TDCJ number or full name. The result tells you which Community Supervision and Corrections Department (CSCD) handles the case. Each Texas county has its own CSCD, and from there a phone call to that office gets you the officer assignment. Texas does not publish individual PO names on the public site — privacy and safety rules block that. But the office line is enough to start the conversation.
Georgia is more direct. The Georgia Department of Community Supervision (DCS) Office Locator lets you punch in a county or ZIP and pulls back the supervising office, complete address, and main line. Georgia also runs an offender lookup tied to GDC ID numbers. Together, those two tools cover probably 90% of Georgia probationer needs without anyone ever picking up a phone.
Ohio's Franklin County Common Pleas Court — covering Columbus and surrounding municipalities — operates one of the more transparent county-level systems in the country. The Adult Probation Department's online directory lists supervising units by judge, with a single contact number per unit. Other Ohio counties vary; Cuyahoga County (Cleveland) keeps things to a main line, while Hamilton County (Cincinnati) publishes department breakdowns by case type.
State Lookup Tools at a Glance
TDCJ Offender Information Search returns probation status by name or TDCJ number. County CSCD office line provided. Officer name withheld; call office to confirm assignment.
DCS Office Locator pulls supervising office by ZIP or county. GDC Offender Query returns probation status. Office line answered during business hours.
Common Pleas Court Adult Probation Department publishes unit contacts by sentencing judge. One number per unit; transfer to assigned officer on request.
County-by-county model. Los Angeles County Probation, San Diego, Alameda, and others run independent lookup portals tied to local case numbers.
FDC Offender Network confirms probation status statewide. Circuit-level Community Corrections offices handle direct supervision queries by phone.
NYS DOCCS Parolee Lookup covers parole. Probation runs through counties; NYC Department of Probation publishes office locator for the five boroughs.
Federal probationers — and anyone supervising federal cases — use an entirely separate channel. The federal court system is divided into 94 judicial districts, each with its own U.S. Probation and Pretrial Services Office. There's no nationwide federal lookup that returns an assigned officer by name. What you get instead is the district office, and from there a phone call or in-person visit pulls up the individual assignment.
To find your federal district, head to the U.S. Courts website and use the court locator by ZIP code. That returns the district court that handled the sentencing, and the U.S. Probation office for that district shares the same building or one nearby. Each office publishes a main phone number, a duty officer line for after-hours emergencies, and supervising officer contact info on request.
If you only have a federal register number — the eight-digit BOP ID — you can verify someone's status via the Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator. That tool tells you if a person is in custody, on supervised release, or has completed their sentence. For active supervised release, it points to the district. From there, the standard phone call to the USPO office completes the lookup.
Federal probation officers carry larger caseloads than most state COs, which means reaching one directly can take a day or two. Leave a voicemail with your case number and a callback number — they return calls between court appearances. Federal officers also tend to be more responsive to email once you've established contact, since most federal supervision involves remote check-ins between in-person visits.

Lookup Paths by Who's Asking
Start with the paperwork from your sentencing or release. Your assigned officer's name, office address, and phone are printed on the supervision conditions form. Lost it? Call the clerk of court in the county or district where you were sentenced — they confirm the assigned probation office in seconds and patch you to the supervising line. Once connected, give your case number and ask for your officer by case ID, not by name. They route the call.
If you've moved out of state, the interstate compact may apply — your supervising state shifts. Ask your original officer or the office for the new state's contact info before you relocate, not after.
What happens when the state lookup tool is down or the case is too old to appear in current databases? More common than you'd hope. Most state DOC websites archive cases more than five to seven years past completion, and some county systems lose records during database migrations. There are a handful of workarounds that consistently produce results.
The court clerk's office in the sentencing county is the single most reliable backup. Clerks keep paper or microfilmed records for every case ever processed, going back decades. A phone call or in-person visit with a case number, a name, or even just an approximate sentencing date pulls up the file. From the file, you get the originally assigned probation officer and the office that handled the case. Whether the same officer still supervises matters less than confirming the office of record.
For ongoing supervision questions where the state portal is unhelpful, the state public defender's office is an underused resource. Public defenders handle thousands of supervision cases and maintain working relationships with most probation offices. Even if they didn't represent the person in question, the office can usually point you in the right direction with one phone call.
Finally, in extreme cases — say, you're tracking someone for legitimate reasons but lack standing under VINE rules — the state ombudsman's office for corrections handles complaints and inquiries that don't fit other channels. Response times are slower (think weeks, not days), but the office can compel answers from DOC departments that refuse normal requests.
Search results for "probation officer lookup" surface dozens of paid background-check sites promising instant PO names and addresses. Most are recycling public-record data you can get for free in under ten minutes through official channels. Some are outright scams. None of them have access to active probation officer assignment data — that information lives only in DOC databases and is not for sale.
Stick to .gov sites, court clerks, and registered victim notification programs. If a site asks for a credit card to return an officer's name, close the tab.
Victim notification systems deserve a closer look because they're the most powerful lookup tool that no one talks about. VINE launched in 1994 after a Kentucky case where a victim was killed by a recently released offender she didn't know was out. The system now operates in 48 states and Washington DC, with a sister program — SAVIN — running parallel coverage in jurisdictions where VINE doesn't reach.
Here's what makes VINE useful for PO lookups: once you register an offender, the system tells you not just where they are but who supervises them. Status changes flag automatically — transfer to a new district, change of supervising officer, violation hearing scheduled, end of supervision. You get the updates by text, voice call, email, or app push, whichever you prefer. Registration is fully anonymous; the offender never knows you registered them.
To register, head to vinelink.com and search by name and state. The system returns matching offenders with case status. Click "register" and pick your notification method. You can list multiple methods (text plus email is the common combo). The phone confirmation line — 1-800-VINE-CALL — works the same way and is the better choice if you'd rather not create an online account.
VINE does not return a probation officer's name in every state. Some states limit data sharing to status changes and hearing dates. But every state in the program returns the supervising office or district, which is the next-best thing and gets you to a phone call that completes the picture.

Lookup Process: Step-by-Step
- ✓Gather case number, full legal name, and sentencing county or federal district before opening any website.
- ✓Identify which group you fall into: probationer, victim, attorney, or family member — each uses different tools.
- ✓Try the state DOC online lookup first if you have a case number. Texas, Georgia, Florida, and most other states publish portals.
- ✓For federal cases, locate your district via the U.S. Courts ZIP code locator, then call the U.S. Probation office for that district.
- ✓Victims and family registrants should set up VINE or SAVIN notifications — they update automatically and cover most states.
- ✓If online tools fail, call the court clerk's office in the sentencing county. They access case records by name and date.
- ✓Public defender offices serve as a backup for active supervision questions, even for cases they didn't handle directly.
- ✓Never pay for a third-party background-check site. All legitimate PO lookup data is free through .gov channels.
Each lookup method has tradeoffs. Online state portals are fast and free, but they assume the database is current — and database lag of three to six months isn't unusual, especially after caseload transfers. Phone calls to county or district offices give you live, accurate info, but they require business-hours availability and a few minutes of patience. Court clerks pull from the most reliable records, but the data they hold may be years out of date if supervision has shifted.
For active probationers, the smart move is using two channels together. Start online to confirm the office of record, then call that office to verify current officer assignment. The whole process takes under 15 minutes once you've done it once. For victims and family, VINE or SAVIN handles ongoing monitoring better than any manual check — set it up once and forget about it until the notification arrives.
Online Portals vs. Phone Lookups
- +Online state DOC portals are free and available 24/7
- +Most return supervising office and contact info instantly
- +VINE and SAVIN automate ongoing tracking with no extra effort
- +No need to disclose personal info or relationship to offender
- +Federal court locator narrows district in under a minute
- −Database lag of 3–6 months means data may be outdated
- −Online tools rarely return the individual officer's name
- −Some county systems are missing or behind paywalls
- −Search returns multiple matches when names are common
- −Old cases (5+ years past completion) often drop off public lookups
A few edge cases come up enough to mention. Interstate compact transfers happen when a probationer relocates to another state. The original sentencing state retains formal authority, but day-to-day supervision shifts to the receiving state. To track the new officer, start with the original state's lookup tool — most return a "compact case, transferred to [state]" flag with the new state listed. From there, the receiving state's lookup picks up the trail.
For juvenile probation cases, public lookup tools rarely return useful info. Most juvenile records are sealed by default, and supervising officers are not listed in any public database. Contact must go through the juvenile court directly, with appropriate standing (parent, guardian, attorney, or court-appointed advocate). General public queries about juvenile probationers will not get answered through normal channels.
Military probation — which happens through the Uniform Code of Military Justice — is handled by the relevant branch's Judge Advocate General office, not civilian DOC. For service members under post-discharge civilian supervision, the standard state or federal lookups apply.
And finally, diversion programs sometimes use supervising officers without calling them "probation officers" formally. Drug courts, mental health courts, and veterans' treatment courts often assign case managers or counselors instead. The lookup process is similar — start with the sentencing court clerk, who will route you to the right office.
One last thing worth flagging: the moment you confirm who your PO is, save the contact info in three places — your phone, your email, and a paper note tucked somewhere safe. Officers rotate, but your case number stays put. Having the office line and your case number written down means you can re-establish contact in a single phone call, no matter what happens to your devices.
For victims and family members tracking offenders through VINE or SAVIN, set the notification preferences to your most-used contact method and check that it's working. Test alerts are sent during enrollment; if you didn't receive one, something's wrong with the setup. Fix it before you actually need the system. The system depends on you confirming receipt, so don't leave that step half-done.
A quick word on timing. Check-in deadlines drive most probation lookup urgency. If you've missed an appointment because you couldn't reach your officer, do not wait — call the supervising office immediately, leave a voicemail explaining what happened, and document the call (date, time, who you spoke with). Officers and supervisors expect occasional missed connections, but they expect you to make a documented good-faith effort to reach them. The lookup process and the documentation process go hand in hand.
For interstate cases especially, build a contact list that includes both the sending state's office and the receiving state's office. Compact cases sometimes lose track of who has authority, and having both numbers handy resolves confusion faster than starting from scratch each time. The same logic applies to federal-to-state transitions, when supervised release runs concurrent with a state probation term — both offices need to know about each other, and you need to be able to reach both.
The probation lookup process feels harder than it is. Once you know which channel applies to your situation — state portal, federal court locator, victim notification system, or court clerk's office — the lookup itself takes minutes. The real work is figuring out which channel fits, and that's what this guide aimed to make clear. Bookmark the resources you'll use most, save your case number somewhere durable, and keep the office line handy. That's the whole playbook.
Probation Officer Questions and Answers
About the Author
Law Enforcement Trainer & Civil Service Exam Specialist
John Jay College of Criminal JusticeMarcus B. Thompson earned his Master of Arts in Criminal Justice from John Jay College of Criminal Justice and served 12 years as a law enforcement officer before transitioning to full-time academy instruction. He is a POST-certified instructor who has prepared candidates for police entrance exams, firefighter assessments, and civil service examinations across dozens of agencies.