Search St. Croix County Divorce Records

St. Croix County Divorce Records are easier to search when you match the record to the right office first. Some requests start with the Clerk of Courts because the county court file is the key source. Others start with the Register of Deeds because a certified divorce certificate is what you need. WCCA gives you the public case view, while the county checklist pages show what a divorce filing needs before the court will accept it. If you are trying to find a case, copy, or certificate in Hudson, begin with the record type and then follow the county path that fits it.

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St. Croix County Overview

715-386-4630 Clerk of Courts
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St. Croix County Divorce Records Office

The Clerk of Courts is the court-side home for St. Croix County Divorce Records. The county clerk page says the office keeps a record of court filings and proceedings, while the law library page lists the clerk of courts as the local source for court forms, family matters, and court records. That is the place to start when you need the file itself, a docket check, or a question about what happened in the case.

The county directory PDF is another useful local map because it confirms the Register of Deeds contact point alongside the other county offices. That matters in St. Croix County because the divorce file and the divorce certificate do not follow the same path. If you are asking about a decree that stayed in the court system, the clerk matters. If you need a certified divorce certificate, the Register of Deeds is the office that issues it for the current statewide date range.

The St. Croix County Clerk of Courts image below comes from the county clerk page at St. Croix County Clerk of Courts. It is the best visual match for the office that holds the case record.

St. Croix County Divorce Records clerk of courts office

Use the clerk page when you need the court file, hearing details, or a public case lookup that starts with the docket.

Note: In St. Croix County, older divorce certificates belong with the Clerk of Courts, while newer certificates come from the Register of Deeds.

St. Croix County Divorce Records Copies

The Register of Deeds is the right office for most St. Croix County Divorce Records copy requests that fall within the current statewide certificate window. The vital records page says the office issues certified copies of divorce records and sets the fee at $20 for the first copy and $3 for each additional copy of the same record. The office also accepts the usual identification rules, so bring the right ID if you want the request processed without delay.

The ordering vital records page adds the practical details. In-person requests go through the Register of Deeds office, mail requests go to 1101 Carmichael Road in Hudson, and requests are processed during office hours with a cutoff near the end of the day. That page is the best place to check payment rules, mail instructions, and the expected timing for a copy request. It also keeps the divorce certificate request separate from the court file request, which matters when you are trying to avoid a wasted trip.

For a divorce certificate dated before January 1, 2016, the county says to contact the Clerk of Courts at 715-386-4630. For a certificate dated on or after that date, the Register of Deeds can issue it when the event falls in the state-issued date range. That split is the key St. Croix County detail, and it is the reason a divorce search should always start with the filing year.

The St. Croix County Ordering Vital Records image below comes from the county ordering page at St. Croix County Ordering Vital Records. It is the best match for the copy request workflow.

St. Croix County Divorce Records ordering vital records

Use this page when you are ready to order a certified copy in person, by mail, or through the county's online process.

Note: The certified copy fee is simple, but the office split is not, so the filing year tells you whether the clerk or the Register of Deeds should answer first.

St. Croix County Divorce Records Filing Steps

If you are starting a case, the checklist pages are the best public guide to St. Croix County Divorce Records filing steps. The without-children checklist and the with-children checklist both tell you what to file with the Clerk of Circuit Court, and they also show that the court reviews the filing for completeness before it accepts the case. That keeps the process orderly. It also keeps the first trip from turning into a second one for missing papers.

The county pages also show the fee difference. A divorce without minor children carries a filing fee of $184.50, while a divorce with minor children carries a filing fee of $194.50. The with-children checklist adds the parenting plan requirement and makes clear that both parties must attend the parenting class. The checklists also say financial disclosure statements are exchanged within 90 days, so the file keeps moving after the first papers are filed.

The 120-day waiting period remains a core part of the Wisconsin divorce timeline. The county checklist pages say that period begins from service or from the filing of a joint petition, so a finished judgment does not happen right away. The papers may also lead to a status conference, a stipulation, or a proposed final judgment if the parties reach agreement. Those steps belong in the case file, which is why the clerk office matters even when the search started as a simple records request.

If you need the state rules that sit behind the local process, Wisconsin Court System Divorce Help gives the broader self-help view and helps connect the forms to the court process. It is useful when the county checklist leaves you with a filing question rather than a records question.

St. Croix County Divorce Records Help

The Wisconsin State Law Library page for St. Croix County is the best local help map when a records search turns into a service question. It brings the clerk of courts, register of deeds, county clerk, family court commissioner, register in probate, and legal aid resources into one place. That makes it easier to see who handles divorce papers, who handles certificates, and who can help if the issue moves beyond records and into family court procedure.

The county also points people toward the St. Croix Valley Bar Free Legal Clinic and other help contacts through the law library listing. Those resources are not a replacement for the record itself, but they are useful when the search uncovers a live filing problem, a custody issue, or a need to understand the next court step. If you are only after a copy, stay with the record office. If the search reveals a bigger case issue, the help directory can point you in the right direction.

For quick contact checks, use St. Croix County Clerk of Courts, St. Croix County Vital Records, and the official county directory. Together, they cover the court file, the certificate request, and the county office map.

Note: The county clerk, the Register of Deeds, and the law library each answer a different part of the divorce records search, so the right office depends on what you need.

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