Search Washington County Phone Directory

Washington County Phone Directory searches work best when you start with the office, not the topic. In Washington County, that might mean the clerk, a city desk, the water district, or the county portal. St. George is the county seat, so many callers begin there, but the right number can sit in a different office. This guide keeps the local names, lines, and public request paths in one place so you can move fast and call with a clear ask.

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Washington County Phone Directory Basics

Washington County keeps a broad departmental directory on its official site at Departments. That page is a good first stop when you need a county phone directory for the assessor, attorney, auditor, clerk, GIS, sheriff, treasurer, or another county office. The main county line is also a useful backstop at 435-301-7000. If you do not know which desk should answer, the county site can route you better than a blind call to a random extension.

The county clerk page makes one point very clear: the Washington County Clerk is not the Clerk of the Courts. That matters for a phone directory search because people often need the wrong office the first time. The clerk handles elections, marriage licenses, passports, GRAMA records requests, and clerk fees. If your call is about a public record, you should start with the clerk or the county portal at Portal, not with a general search engine result that sends you to the wrong place.

The county also publishes a broad contact structure through its services pages. That helps when you are trying to reach a person instead of a form. Some callers want a records officer. Others need a permit desk, a map shop, or a finance line. Washington County makes those lanes visible. The trick is to keep the office name in front of the phone number and the phone number in front of the request.

When the question is about local water or a service district, the county directory still helps because public utilities often sit beside county land use, growth, and record questions. The point of a Washington County Phone Directory is not just speed. It is accuracy. If you start with the right office, the call ends faster and the next step is easier.

The Washington County Water Conservancy District keeps its own contact page at Washington County Water Conservancy District, and the image below shows a local public service office tied to county growth and records work.

Washington County Phone Directory screenshot of the water conservancy district contact page

That district lists a phone number, fax, email, office hours, and a GRAMA request path. For Washington County callers, that makes it a practical model for how public contact pages should work.

Washington County Clerk Phone Directory

The Washington County Clerk page is the center of the county's public records path. The office sits at 111 East Tabernacle Street in St. George and uses 435-301-7220 for direct calls. On the official page, the clerk separates election information, marriage licenses, passport information, GRAMA records requests, clerk fees, and commission work. That structure saves time. A caller can use the same office page to find the right branch of county business without wandering through unrelated pages.

For records requests, the county clerk page points people to the GRAMA Records Request process and the Utah Open Records Portal. The page explains that requests can be sent by email, mail, fax, or in person to the Records Officer at the clerk's office. The official fee page at Clerk Fees shows request and copy charges, and the GRAMA page names the adopted fee schedule under Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2. If you are searching a Washington County Phone Directory for the person who can release a record, the clerk is often that first call.

The clerk page also reminds callers that some requests need more than a name. A record officer may want a case type, a parcel number, a date range, or a short description of the file. That is especially true when you are asking for a public file that is old, broad, or easy to misread. A short phone call can save a lot of back and forth. Washington County has made the request route clear, but the caller still needs to point the office in the right direction.

Note: Washington County clerks can process a request faster when you keep the office name, the record type, and a short date range in the same message.

St. George Phone Directory Contacts

St. George is the county seat, so its city directory is part of the Washington County Phone Directory picture. The official city page at St. George City Directory lists city hall at 61 S. Main St. and a main number of 435-627-4000. The same page gives you the police number, public works, utilities, recreation, and other city lines in one place. That is useful when a county issue starts to look like a city issue.

City directory pages work well for callers who know the neighborhood but not the office. If you need police, the city directory shows 435-627-4300 for non-emergency police calls. If you need a street or water issue, the directory points you to public works or utilities. If you need a person, not just a desk, the site also lists named leaders and department staff. A county phone directory is strongest when it shows that kind of split between general lines and named contacts.

Many Washington County residents will use St. George as a hub even when the record is not a city record. That is normal. The county seat handles a lot of traffic, and the city's contact structure helps callers sort out where to go next. A good Washington County Phone Directory page should not hide that link. It should make the link obvious.

The county and the city each serve a different role. The county handles county business. The city handles city service. But callers often cross those lines in the same week. A clear directory keeps the path short, and that matters when you need a quick answer from a real person.

Washington County Records And Maps

Property, survey, and GIS work often lead back to the county recorder. Washington County's recorder pages explain how records are filed, copied, and searched. The county's official Record of Survey page explains that survey plats are filed and indexed for public access, and the Recorder Fees page shows copy and record fees. If your Washington County Phone Directory search is about ownership, boundary lines, or parcel history, this is the office family you want.

Washington County also has a GIS data request page at GIS Data Request. That matters because many callers do not need a long story. They need a map, a parcel layer, or a data file that shows where a tract sits. The county's GIS staff can help with that kind of lookup. In a directory search, that is the difference between a phone number and a useful result. The right line connects you to the right record set.

The county's departments page and portal also point users toward property search, tax information, and other land-related services. That broader contact web is part of the reason Washington County needs a good Phone Directory page. Many requests do not stay in one lane. A parcel question may turn into a recording question. A recording question may turn into a survey question. The county's structure makes those handoffs possible.

The county property record image below is tied to Washington County's public record path and its land-use search tools.

Washington County Phone Directory screenshot of property records contact resources

That image pairs well with the recorder and GIS pages because it points callers toward the offices that can trace parcels, deeds, and survey files without guessing at the next step.

Washington County Phone Directory Tips

Use the simplest route first. A short call beats a long search when the office is clear.

  • Start with the county department name.
  • Use the clerk for GRAMA requests.
  • Use the portal for online request paths.
  • Use St. George for city service numbers.
  • Use the recorder for land and survey questions.

Washington County's directory structure rewards callers who keep their notes tight. If you have an address, a parcel number, a case number, or a date range, give that first. If you only know the person or office name, say that and ask who should handle the next step. The county, city, and district pages all work better when the caller gives one clean clue instead of five loose ones. That is the real value of a local Phone Directory page. It helps you call once, speak once, and move on.

Washington County residents who still need a broader contact list can also use the official county departments page and the Washington City directory at Washington City Directory. When a county page is thin, the right city or state page often fills the gap without losing the local context.

Washington County residents who need extension help can also use Utah State University Extension's Washington County service contact at USU Extension Washington County. The main department phone is 435-797-3366, which gives callers another official line for county-serving programs and staff support.

Note: If the first office cannot help, ask which department owns the record before you hang up.

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