St. Petersburg Residents Directory

St. Petersburg residents directory records can be searched by anyone under Florida's public records law. The city is in Pinellas County with about 260,000 people, making it one of the largest in the state. You can find St. Petersburg residents through voter registration files, property records, court data, and the city's own public records system. City Clerk Chan Srinivasa oversees public records for the city. Most St. Petersburg residents directory searches can be done online for free or at a low cost. This guide covers the main tools and offices you can use to look up people in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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St. Petersburg Quick Facts

~260K Population
Pinellas County
Ch. 119 Public Records Law
15¢ Per Page Copy

St. Petersburg Public Records Access

Florida law defines a public record as any material prepared in connection with official government business. That covers documents, papers, maps, tapes, photos, films, and digital files. In St. Petersburg, any person can inspect and examine public records at any reasonable time. You do not have to put your request in writing, and you can even make a request by phone. Any record considered readily available will be provided by the city department that holds it. The St. Petersburg residents directory benefits from this open access because most city data is available on request.

The St. Petersburg public records page explains how to request and receive city records under Florida law.

St. Petersburg residents directory public records request page

Putting your request in writing helps staff clarify the exact scope of what you need from St. Petersburg.

City Clerk Chan Srinivasa handles public records requests for St. Petersburg. Call 727-893-7448 or email Chandrahasa.Srinivasa@StPete.org. You can also mail requests to P.O. Box 2842, St. Petersburg, FL 33731. Copy fees are up to 15 cents per one-sided page. Certified copies cost $1 each. For requests that take more than 30 minutes of staff time, the city can charge a labor fee based on the cost of the lowest-paid person who can do the work, plus a 33 percent increase for benefits. The city does not create new records or compile data that does not already exist as part of a St. Petersburg residents directory request. They only provide what is already on file.

Note: The custodian is not required to compile or create a new record, only to make existing St. Petersburg records available.

St. Petersburg Police Records

The St. Petersburg Police Department has its own Records Division that handles public records requests for law enforcement data. The division responds to requests in line with Florida Statute 119. Most requests involve copies of accident and offense reports. You can also get arrest records and traffic crash reports from the St. Petersburg police. These records add depth to any St. Petersburg residents directory search when you need to know if someone has a local case on file.

The St. Petersburg Police Records Division page shows how to submit a request for police-related documents.

St. Petersburg residents directory police records division portal

Use the Public Records Request button on the police website for faster access to reports in St. Petersburg.

Some information in police reports may be redacted under Chapter 119. Active criminal investigation data is exempt from disclosure. For a statewide check, the FDLE offender search lets you look up registered offenders by name, address, or zip code across all of Florida. That database updates daily. Crash reports can be obtained through the St. Petersburg police or through the state crash report system.

Voter and Property Records in St. Petersburg

Voter registration is a core tool in the St. Petersburg residents directory. Under Florida law, voter info is public record and may be given to anyone who asks. Each voter file has the person's name, home address, date of birth, and party affiliation. Social Security numbers and driver's license numbers are not included. The Florida Division of Elections oversees this data at the state level, while the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections keeps local rolls. With over 260,000 residents, St. Petersburg has one of the bigger voter files in the Tampa Bay area, making this a strong search tool for finding people in the city.

Property records from the Pinellas County Property Appraiser give you another way to search the St. Petersburg residents directory. You can look up any property by owner name or address. Results show the owner, mailing address, assessed value, and exemption status. A Homestead exemption on a St. Petersburg property almost always means it is the owner's main home. The Pinellas County Clerk of the Circuit Court also keeps official records like deeds, mortgages, and liens. You can search the Pinellas County Clerk website for these records online.

St. Petersburg Court Records Search

The Comprehensive Case Information System covers court records from all 67 Florida counties. You can search for a St. Petersburg resident by name to find civil, criminal, family, and probate cases filed anywhere in the state. Basic searches are free. CCIS pulls data from every county clerk, so you get a wide view of a person's case history. This is the fastest way to check if someone in St. Petersburg has any court filings on record.

The Pinellas County Clerk of the Circuit Court handles all local court filings for St. Petersburg. The clerk keeps case files, dockets, and document images for cases filed in the county. Certified copies cost more than plain ones. Not all document images are posted online because of privacy rules set by Florida law. For records not available on the web, you can visit the clerk's office or send a request by mail or phone. Chapter 119 of the Florida Statutes sets the rules for what the clerk can and cannot release from St. Petersburg court files.

License Records for St. Petersburg

Professional license data rounds out the St. Petersburg residents directory. The DBPR license search covers over a million professionals and businesses across Florida. Search for any St. Petersburg resident by name, license number, or city to see their license status, address of record, and disciplinary history. The database covers real estate agents, contractors, cosmetologists, and many more trades.

Always check that a license status reads Active. This tool is free and open to the public. Combining it with voter data, property records, and court files gives you a full picture of a St. Petersburg resident through public sources under Florida law.

Note: The DBPR database also has a downloadable files section for bulk license data that researchers may find useful.

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Pinellas County Residents Directory

St. Petersburg is the largest city in Pinellas County. All court filings, property records, and official documents for St. Petersburg go through Pinellas County offices. The county has about one million residents and includes cities like Clearwater and Largo. For more on the county records system, clerk contacts, and related tools, visit the Pinellas County residents directory page.

View Pinellas County Residents Directory

Cities Near St. Petersburg

These cities are close to St. Petersburg and share Pinellas County resources or are in the Tampa Bay area. You can search for residents in each through the same county and state public records tools.