Find Lahaina White Pages
The Lahaina White Pages pulls together the tools you need to look up a person or an address in west Maui. Lahaina took a heavy hit from the August 2023 fire. Many records for the burn zone got pulled together in new ways. Some files moved. Some stayed in place. This page points you to the main Maui County desks, the state portals, and the Lahaina-specific recovery tools. Start your search below, then scroll for each local link.
Lahaina White Pages Overview
Lahaina Public Records Access
Public records in Lahaina fall under state law. The Uniform Information Practices Act, Chapter 92F of the Hawaii Revised Statutes, sets the rules for every county and state office. You can ask for police reports, permit files, council minutes, property data, and more. Response time is up to ten business days. Fees kick in after the first hour of staff search time.
Maui County runs a new online UIPA portal. It went live January 24, 2024. File a request at any hour, track it online, and get delay notices sent straight to your email. The Maui public record request page walks through the steps. Call the Office of Information Practices at (808) 586-1400 if a search hits a dead end.
Note: Post-fire recovery files for the Lahaina burn zone sit with several agencies, so one UIPA request may get split across offices.
Lahaina Fire and Public Safety Records
The August 2023 Lahaina fire reshaped the public safety map in town. The Maui Fire Department still responds from stations at Lahaina, Napili, and Wailuku. The Fire and Public Safety page posts station lists, fire prevention guides, and open permit info.
The site links to open records request info, brush clearance rules, and the formal fire investigation process for past incidents.
Fire reports for a specific call can be requested through the Maui County UIPA portal. Some reports tied to the 2023 fire are part of active review, so parts may stay closed. Incident reports that do get released show date, time, address, units dispatched, and the event summary.
Emergency Records for Lahaina
The Maui Emergency Management Agency, or MEMA, runs emergency plans, evacuation orders, and post-disaster recovery coordination. MEMA played a lead role in the August 2023 fire response. Ongoing reports, after-action reviews, and state audit findings are posted as they clear review. The Emergency Management page hosts alert sign-ups and the current hazard plan.
The page also links to the Maui Ready site, which holds flood maps, tsunami zones, and shelter addresses for west Maui.
Many records tied to the Lahaina recovery also cross into federal files with FEMA. Those are kept by FEMA and the state, not the county. A White Pages request for recovery data may need a mix of county, state, and federal sources. The MEMA office in Wailuku can point you to the right agency. Phone the main Maui County line at (808) 270-7285 to route a call.
Lahaina Property White Pages
Real estate data for Lahaina still flows through the Maui County Real Property Assessment Division at 110 'Ala'ihi Street, Suite 110, Kahului, 96732. Phone (808) 270-7297. Use the qPublic portal to pull owner names, TMK data, and assessed values for each parcel. Burn-zone parcels still show under their pre-fire owner and TMK.
The TMK system uses county code 2 for Maui. Lahaina parcels mostly use TMK zones 4 and 5. Type the TMK with or without dashes. The system also lets you search by owner name, street address, parcel number, or subdivision. Basic searches are free. Detail views show size, physical attributes, sales history, and value trends.
Deeds for Lahaina parcels file through the state Bureau of Conveyances in Honolulu. Phone (808) 587-0147. Maui does not hold county-level deed records. For county permits and code cases, use the MAPPS portal. Search by address, TMK, permit number, or applicant.
Lahaina Court Records Lookup
Lahaina falls in the Second Judicial Circuit. The main courthouse is in Wailuku. Some minor cases run through the Lahaina District Court location. Use eCourt Kokua to search case files for free by name, case number, attorney, or ticket number.
District Court covers traffic, small claims up to $5,000, and civil matters up to $40,000. Circuit Court takes felonies, larger civil cases, and probate. Family Court handles divorce, custody, child support, adoption, and protection orders. Sealed files, juvenile records, and confidential items do not show. For a certified copy, contact the Second Circuit clerk in Wailuku.
Lahaina Police Records
The Maui Police Department runs the Lahaina patrol district out of the station on Wainee Street. Records requests go to the central Records Section at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, 96793. Phone (808) 244-6355. Hours run Monday through Thursday, 8:00am to 4:00pm. Bring valid photo ID. The Lahaina substation can take a walk-in but final fulfilment comes from Wailuku.
Incident reports go to the victim or an authorized rep. Traffic crash reports go to parties named in the report and their insurance reps. Fees vary. Most requests turn around in a few business days. Open investigation files stay closed. Non-emergency calls dial (808) 244-6400. Emergency calls always dial 911.
Lahaina Vital Records
Birth, death, marriage, and divorce records sit at the state level. The Hawaii Department of Health Vital Records Section is at 1250 Punchbowl Street, Room 103, Honolulu. Phone (808) 586-4533. Birth and marriage records run from 1909. Divorce records start in 1951. The first certified copy costs $10. Each extra copy of the same record at the same time costs $4.
Records are closed for 75 years from the event. During that window only the person named, a spouse, a parent, a child, a grandchild, a legal guardian, a legal rep, or someone with a court order can get a copy. For pre-1909 data, the Hawaii State Archives in Honolulu is the next step.
Professional License Lookup
Verify a Lahaina doctor, nurse, realtor, attorney, or contractor through the state Professional and Vocational Licensing Division. Results show license number, issue date, expiration, status, and past discipline. The portal is free. Contractor license data is key for any rebuild work in the burn zone.
Criminal history checks run through the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center for $30 per name search. Bulk state data sits free at data.hawaii.gov. The Hawaii Property Checker pulls deed and mortgage data by address for any island.
Note: After the 2023 fire, check any contractor's license status before you sign a rebuild deal to confirm the license is active and in good standing.
Nearby Maui Cities
Lahaina files records through the same Maui County desks as the rest of the island. Jump to a sibling city for local notes.
- Wailuku is the county seat
- Kahului holds the Real Property office
- Kihei is the south shore hub
- Kula sits high up in the upcountry area
- Back to Maui County for the full office list
All use the same Second Circuit, the same UIPA portal, and the same Maui Police Records Section.

