Search Schofield Barracks White Pages
Schofield Barracks is a US Army installation in the heart of central Oahu. A Schofield Barracks White Pages search pulls names tied to the post, to Wahiawa, and to the surrounding communities. The installation itself runs on federal rules, but the off-post files still sit with Hawaii state and Honolulu County offices. That means court cases, property data outside the gate, and vital records flow through the same channels as any other place on Oahu. Use the tool on this page to start a name or address lookup, then follow the links for deeper records.
Schofield Barracks Record Overview
Using the White Pages Around Schofield
Most searches tied to Schofield Barracks split into two buckets. On-post incidents and service records stay with the Army and the Department of Defense. Off-post items go through the City and County of Honolulu. A family lookup that reaches into Wahiawa, Mililani, or Whitmore Village uses the same tools as any other Oahu search.
The state gives you a clear right of access under UIPA. The UIPA Q&A page covers your rights in plain words. Every agency on the island follows that law. Staff must answer in ten business days. Paper copies run $0.25 per page. Search time past the first hour costs $2.50 per fifteen minutes.
Know what record you need before you file. A good description helps staff find the file fast. State the agency. State the date range. State the subject if you can. That cuts the time and the cost.
Note: On-post police reports from the Military Police fall under federal FOIA rather than Hawaii UIPA, and those requests go to the garrison public affairs office.
Honolulu Police Department and Schofield
The Honolulu Police Department handles off-post calls that touch Schofield residents. HPD District 2 covers Wahiawa and the area around the gate. The screen below shows the HPD home page, which serves as the starting point for report requests, arrest logs, and crime stats.

HPD's Records Section at 801 S. Beretania Street sells copies of incident and traffic reports. Phone (808) 529-3111.
A traffic crash that happens off-post but involves a service member goes to HPD. So does a domestic call outside the gate. On-post arrests go to the MP blotter instead. You can still cross-reference through eCourt Kokua if the off-post prosecutor files a charge. That search lives on the Hawaii Judiciary records page.
HPD posts daily arrest logs online. Those show the booking name, age, charge code, and location. The logs cover all nine HPD districts on Oahu, including the Wahiawa area near Schofield.
Court Records Near Schofield Barracks
The Wahiawa District Court handles most minor crimes and traffic cases for residents near Schofield Barracks. The main First Circuit Court on Punchbowl Street takes on felonies and civil cases over $40,000. Divorce and child support filings go to Family Court, also in Honolulu.
Use eCourt Kokua for a fast lookup. It covers traffic, criminal, civil, Land Court, and Tax Appeal Court files. Search by party name, case number, attorney, or ticket. Under Hawaii Revised Statutes section 92F-14, privacy limits apply to sealed cases, juvenile matters, and certain adoption records. Those will not show in the public tool.
Certified copies of court papers come from the clerk at the courthouse where the case was filed. The clerk sets the fee. Mail and in-person orders both work. Most files process within a week.
Property Records Near the Post
The installation itself is federal land, so it does not show in the county tax system. Homes in the off-post communities nearby show up in the Honolulu Real Property Assessment Division search. Enter an address, a parcel number, or a map pin. Results show owner, assessed value, tax class, and building data.
The state's Bureau of Conveyances holds the deeds, mortgages, and liens for every Oahu parcel. Basic searches run free. Document images cost $1 per page. Certified copies are $5 for the first page and $1 for each extra. A good free option is the Hawaii Property Checker site. It pulls the conveyances and tax data side by side.
Zoning questions go to the Department of Planning and Permitting. Schofield and the nearby Wahiawa homesteads fall under various residential and agricultural zones. Check the LUO before any permit work.
Vital Records for Schofield Families
Families at Schofield Barracks often need a Hawaii birth record. The Hawaii Department of Health Vital Records Section covers all births, deaths, marriages, and divorces that happen in the islands. That includes events on the post. A birth at Tripler or Schofield's medical center gets a Hawaii certificate.
Records stay closed for 75 years. During that window the person named, a spouse, a parent, a child, a grandchild, a guardian, or a legal rep can order a copy. Fees run $10 for the first certified copy and $4 for each extra of the same record. Order online at VitalChek, by mail, or in person at 1250 Punchbowl Street, Room 103.
For a PCS move out of state, order a few extra copies. Army finance and family readiness offices often need them.
Note: Military ID is accepted as photo ID for vital records orders, which speeds up the process for active duty families.
Criminal History Checks
A statewide criminal history check is useful before a security clearance update. The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center runs the criminal history FAQ and the eCrim portal. Self-checks are open to anyone. The fee is $30. The office is at 465 S. King Street, Room 101. Phone (808) 586-3000.
Results include adult convictions, arrests in the past year with no outcome yet, and active restraining orders. Juvenile records are out, with a few narrow exceptions. Active duty Army members should still pull a self-check before a clearance review so any state-level mismatch gets fixed first.
Council District II for Schofield
Schofield Barracks sits in Honolulu City Council District II. The district runs from Mililani Mauka through Wahiawa and up to the North Shore. Look up the current member and office contact on the Honolulu City Council site. The City Clerk's Office keeps full council minutes, bills, and testimony.
Schofield residents who vote in Hawaii cast ballots in District II's races. Early walk-in voting takes place at the Kapolei Hale and the Honolulu Hale before each general election.
Free State Databases for Schofield
Open data tools help fill in the gaps left by paid sites. The Hawaii Open Data Portal serves raw files for the whole state. You can pull traffic, health, tax, and land data. Most sets load as CSV or JSON.
Pair the open data portal with the Hawaii Business Express entity search. That tool shows each registered LLC, corporation, and trade name on Oahu. Staff at Schofield small business offices use it to vet vendors. Results are free to view.
For a final cross-check, run the person through eHawaii Bureau of Conveyances. Any deed, lien, or UCC filing will show up there.
Note: Save each search as a PDF to build a clean record trail before you make a final call on any file.
Other Oahu City Pages
Communities near Schofield that show up in most White Pages searches include Wahiawa, Mililani, Mililani Mauka, Whitmore Village, and Waipahu. Each has its own page. For the broader county tools, head to the Honolulu County White Pages.