Search Hawaiian Paradise Park White Pages
The Hawaiian Paradise Park White Pages is your starting point for people and property lookups inside HPP. The subdivision sits just east of Hilo in the Puna district. It is the largest residential subdivision in the state by lot count. HPP does not have its own city hall, so all records flow through Hawaii County offices in Hilo and the Third Circuit Court. Use this page to link up with the right clerk, the right police station, and the right tax office. The tool below kicks off your Hawaiian Paradise Park White Pages search.
HPP White Pages Overview
HPP White Pages and the Hawaii County Office
HPP sits in the Puna district of Hawaii County. County offices are the main data source for most Hawaiian Paradise Park White Pages searches. The County Clerk operates out of 25 Aupuni Street in Hilo. Phone (808) 961-8255. Email clerk-council@hawaiicounty.gov.
The clerk's team runs elections, files fictitious business names, and keeps Council records. For minutes, ordinances, or old agendas, the county posts an online archive. Sign in with the public credentials to browse documents. If the file you need is not online, send a written UIPA request. The law gives the office ten business days to answer.
Two Council members cover HPP. District 3 covers Panaewa, Puainako, and part of HPP. District 4 covers the rest of HPP along with Hawaiian Beaches, Nanawale, and Leilani Estates. Use the Hawaii County council member lookup to pull up the right office phone and map.
Note: A UIPA request logged with the Hilo County Clerk will show in the UIPA Master Log at data.hawaii.gov after each half-year rollup.
HPP Property Records and White Pages Lookups
Property records do more heavy lifting in HPP than court files. Lots have been sold and resold many times since the original subdivision was laid out. The Hawaii County Real Property Tax Office keeps assessment data for every HPP parcel. The online portal is free and open to anyone.
Use the official county tool at hawaiipropertytax.com to run a search by TMK, address, or owner name. HPP TMKs begin with 3, since 3 is the county digit in Hawaii's Tax Map Key system.

The screen above is the Hawaii County property tax search. Results show owner name, parcel size, building data, assessed value, and tax bill history.
Deeds and mortgages go through the state. Hawaii runs a single statewide recording office called the Bureau of Conveyances. There is no Hilo branch. Pull recorded documents at boc.ehawaii.gov by name, document number, or TMK. Basic searches are free. Document images cost $1 per page. A certified copy is $5 for the first page, then $1 per added page. For a quick address check, try hawaii.propertychecker.com. It pulls ownership and deed data from the same statewide source.
HPP Court Files and Criminal History
All HPP court cases flow into the Third Circuit in Hilo. Hilo District Court is at 777 Kilauea Avenue, (808) 961-7400. The Third Circuit Court next door handles felonies, big civil cases, family court, and probate.
Case lookups are free through the eCourt Kokua system. Start at the Hawaii State Judiciary records page. Search by name, case number, attorney name, or ticket number. The system pulls traffic, criminal, civil, Land Court, and Tax Appeal files. Sealed files and juvenile cases do not show.
A name-based criminal history check is a different tool. The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center at the state Attorney General's Office runs that one. Visit the criminal history FAQ for the full list of steps. The fee is $30. Self-checks are allowed without extra consent.
HPP White Pages Police and Incident Data
The Puna district of the Hawaii Police Department covers HPP. The Puna Station sits in Pahoa, just south of the subdivision. For report requests, most people still go to the main Records Section in Hilo at 349 Kapiolani Street. Phone (808) 935-3311.
Bring a valid government photo ID for any in-person request. The Records Section keeps incident reports, arrest logs, and traffic accident reports. A formal UIPA request works for records not on the counter.
The Hawaii Police Department website posts forms, station phones, and crime data. Daily arrest logs are also on public view at each station. Rules on what can be released tie back to UIPA at Chapter 92F of the Hawaii Revised Statutes.
HPP Vital Records Through the State
Birth, death, marriage, and divorce records for events in HPP sit at the state Vital Records Section. The office is at 1250 Punchbowl Street, Room 103, Honolulu 96813. Phone (808) 586-4533. Start at the Vital Records page for current request forms.
The first certified copy costs $10. Each extra copy of the same record bought at the same time runs $4. Records are closed for 75 years after the event. During that time, only the person named, a close family member, a legal guardian, a legal rep, or someone with a court order can get a copy.
You can order by mail, in person in Honolulu, or online through VitalChek. Valid photo ID is required every time. For family history work on records older than 1909, the Hawaii State Archives holds vital data, probate files, passenger manifests, and Kingdom-era land records.
HPP Planning and Permit Lookups
The Hawaii County Planning Department Windward office covers HPP. It sits at 101 Pauahi Street, Suite 4, Hilo 96720. Phone (808) 961-8288. Zoning letters, SMA permits, and subdivision files all go through Planning. The department website posts forms, maps, and staff contacts.
HPP lots sit in a lava hazard zone, and many have no county water hookup. That matters for title, resale, and insurance. Planning can verify zoning and flood class for a lot.
Professional license checks for an HPP resident run through the state at cca.hawaii.gov/pvl. That tool lists contractors, doctors, nurses, real estate agents, and about 48 other regulated trades. Business entity lookups for Puna-based LLCs and trade names run through Hawaii Business Express. Both tools are free for basic searches.
Nearby Big Island White Pages Pages
HPP sits close to several other Big Island communities that share the same county system. If the person you want lives just outside the subdivision, try a nearby page.
For the full county page with every office contact, hop over to the Hawaii County White Pages hub. It ties together clerk, police, tax, and planning links in one spot.
Note: HPP lots span two council districts, so a voter or property search may list different representative contacts depending on the lot's location within the subdivision.
Hawaiian Paradise Park White Pages and Voter Data
Voter registration data is public in Hawaii within set limits. The County Clerk's Office on each island keeps the voter rolls. A Hawaiian Paradise Park resident who wants to check registration status can call the county or use the state online tool. The data is kept under UIPA rules.
What is open? Name, address, and precinct are part of the basic record. Some fields are closed by law. Phone numbers, birth dates, and ID numbers do not go out. A Hawaiian Paradise Park White Pages search that pulls voter data uses only the open fields.
Campaign activity is public too. The Hawaii Campaign Spending Commission posts reports online. You can see who gave to which race and how much. That can add context to a person's civic footprint in or near Hawaiian Paradise Park.
Ethics filings round out the picture. State legislators, judges, and department heads file yearly disclosures at the Ethics Commission. Those are public too. Not every name in a Hawaiian Paradise Park search will show up, but the ones that do come with strong documentation.