Wailuku Phone Directory
Wailuku is the county seat of Maui County and the place where most island records live. The Wailuku phone directory pulls together the lines that matter most for a quick records search. Use it to reach the Maui County Clerk on South High Street, the Second Circuit Court at Hoapili Hale, the Maui Police on Mahalani Street, and the Wailuku Public Library on High Street. Each number sits on the same page. Pick one, place the call, and move on.
Wailuku Overview
Maui County Clerk Wailuku Phone Directory
The Maui County Clerk is the keeper of Wailuku and island records. The office sits at Kalana O Maui Building, 200 South High Street, 7th Floor, Wailuku, HI 96793. Main phone is (808) 270-7748. The Clerk holds ordinances, resolutions, council files, and every meeting minute for Maui County. The Mayor's Office is one floor up at the 9th floor of the same building. The mayor line is (808) 270-7855. A short walk from the elevator gets most visitors where they need to go.
The Clerk also runs voter registration for Wailuku and the rest of Maui County. Election files, candidate filings, and campaign spending reports all pass through this desk. The Wailuku phone directory tip here is simple. Call the main Clerk line first. Staff will route the call to the right unit. For council session testimony help, ask the desk to pass the call to the Office of Council Services. A quick call often saves a trip up to the 7th floor.
Note: Public records held by the Maui County Clerk fall under chapter 92F of the Hawaii Revised Statutes, the UIPA rule that sets the timeline for a written reply.
Wailuku County Council Phone Directory
The Maui County Council meets at 200 South High Street, 8th Floor, Wailuku, HI 96793. Council Chair Alice L. Lee represents Wailuku, Waihee, and Waikapu. Chair Lee can be reached at (808) 270-7760. Fax goes to (808) 270-7639. Email is alice.lee@mauicounty.us. The Council keeps legislative records, meeting minutes, agendas, and council communications. Most of those files route through the Clerk downstairs.
The council page above shows the full Wailuku phone directory for each council member, plus links to agendas and live meeting video. Nine members sit on the Maui County Council, each tied to a different district. A call to the Wailuku seat is the right first call for questions about local roads, parks, or zoning. For a record in writing, the Clerk's office on the 7th floor is the keeper. Live testimony sign-ups go through the Office of Council Services. That desk can also mail out a packet of past council rulings if asked.
Council staff take calls during normal work hours. The main council line routes to each member's aide. If your question falls under a different district, the aide can transfer the call or share the right number from the Wailuku phone directory.
Wailuku Court Phone Directory
Court records for Wailuku flow through the Second Circuit Court at Hoapili Hale, 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. Main line is (808) 244-2929. The Second Circuit covers all of Maui County, plus Molokai and Lanai. Circuit Court handles felony cases and civil cases over $40,000. District Court sits in the same building for small claims, landlord-tenant cases, and traffic. Family Court is in Wailuku too.
The Wailuku court phone directory ties back to chapter 92F of the Hawaii Revised Statutes. UIPA sets the rule for how court staff share a public file. Most older case files can be pulled at the counter during court hours. For a file on a sealed or pending case, staff may need a court order first. Online lookups run through eCourt Kokua and Ho'ohiki, both listed on the Hawaii Judiciary records page.
Key Wailuku court phone directory lines:
- Second Circuit main line at (808) 244-2929
- Hoapili Hale, 2145 Main Street, Wailuku
- District Court in the same building
- Family Court in Wailuku for family case files
Call the main line first. Staff will route the call to the clerk of court, the records desk, or the right division. Court fees are set by statewide rule, so the schedule that applies to Wailuku matches the one used on every other island.
Maui Police Department Wailuku Phone Directory
Law enforcement for Wailuku and the rest of Maui County runs through the Maui Police Department. The main station sits at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. Main line is (808) 244-6400. The department keeps incident reports, arrest logs, and traffic crash files. Some records come with a hold if the case is still open. That is normal under UIPA.
The Wailuku records desk follows the same UIPA rule used across Hawaii. Call the records line first. Ask for the form. That short call saves a drive up Mahalani. The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center in Honolulu is the state side of criminal history checks. It does not replace a Maui Police report, but the two work together when a case needs a full paper trail. HCJDC main line is (808) 587-3100.
Note: Under chapter 92F HRS, the Maui Police must respond to a valid UIPA request within ten business days or give a reason in writing.
Wailuku Library and Property Phone Directory
The Wailuku Public Library at 251 High Street, Wailuku, HI 96793 is a Hawaii Documents depository. The library holds state and county reports, old newspapers, and the Hawaii and Pacific collection. The Hawaii Documents Center lists Wailuku as one of the island depositories. A quick call to the library branch line can pull up a report before the walk over. For older files not on the shelf, staff can route a call to the Hawaii State Library on Oahu.
The Real Property Assessment Division for Maui County sits in Wailuku too. Property records, tax maps, and owner files all flow through this desk. The qPublic portal pulls assessment data, ownership, and sales history for every Wailuku parcel. Call ahead to confirm a TMK number before filing an appeal. The division also mails out assessment notices each year.
A short Wailuku phone directory for land and library work:
- Wailuku Public Library at 251 High Street
- Real Property Assessment Division, Wailuku
- Second Circuit Court records at (808) 244-2929
- Maui County Clerk at (808) 270-7748
Deeds for Wailuku parcels are recorded at the state Bureau of Conveyances on Oahu. A deed filed there posts to the Maui County tax roll after the Bureau sends the record over. That handoff is why many Wailuku calls bounce between the Bureau and the local assessment office.
UIPA Requests in Wailuku
Public records in Wailuku follow chapter 92F of the Hawaii Revised Statutes, the Uniform Information Practices Act. The Office of Information Practices reads UIPA for every state and county desk. The OIP Attorney of the Day service is free. Call (808) 586-1400 or email oip@hawaii.gov. Most calls get a same-day reply. When a Wailuku office says no, OIP is the right appeals stop. Rulings can still be taken to court, but most cases end at OIP.
The OIP page lists the Wailuku phone directory for UIPA appeals, plus the full set of UIPA opinion letters. The DCCA open records page hosts the standard UIPA request form. Paste the record you want in plain words. Date it. Send it to the right Wailuku desk. That alone clears up most requests before a phone call is needed.
The Department of Health vital records desk handles birth, death, marriage, and civil union files for Wailuku residents. The State Registrar line is (808) 586-4533. For a certified copy, the fee and the ID rules follow the statewide standard, not a Maui-only rule.
Wailuku sits inside Maui County, and all county-level offices are based in Wailuku itself.

