Kodiak Phone Directory Search
The Kodiak phone directory page covers contacts for this island city in the Gulf of Alaska. Kodiak is the main town on Kodiak Island and the seat of the Kodiak Island Borough. The city has its own clerk, police department, and state trooper post, plus a significant U.S. Coast Guard presence. About 13,000 people live across the borough, with the city holding the bulk of that population. This page lists the key phone numbers for the city clerk, police, courts, borough offices, and state agencies. If you need to look up a record, reach a government office, or find the right number for a specific department, the contacts below will point you the right way.
Kodiak Quick Facts
Kodiak City Clerk Phone Directory
The City of Kodiak is at 710 Mill Bay Road, Kodiak, AK 99615. The City Clerk's phone is 907.486.8636. The clerk's office maintains all city records including meeting minutes, ordinances, resolutions, contracts, and other official documents. City Clerk Brandy Warnecke and Deputy Clerk II/Records Specialist Daniel Mendez handle records requests.
A Public Records Request Form is available on the city website. Submit your request through the form and the city processes it under the Alaska Public Records Act. Fees may apply for copying and certifying documents. The city tries to respond within the time set by state law.
The screenshot below shows the City of Kodiak official website.
The city site has department contacts, council meeting info, and public records forms.
Kodiak Police and Trooper Numbers
The Kodiak Police Department is at 2160 Mill Bay Road, Kodiak, AK 99615. The main phone is (907) 486-8000. For emergencies, call 911. The police handle law enforcement within city limits and keep records of incidents, reports, and arrests.
The Alaska State Troopers Kodiak Post is at 2421 Mill Bay Road, Kodiak, AK 99615, phone (907) 486-4121. Troopers cover areas outside city limits across Kodiak Island. The Alaska State Troopers contacts page lists all posts statewide.
The screenshot below shows the Kodiak Police Department information.
Contact the police department for report copies and records requests.
The Kodiak Jail is at 1421 Rezanof Drive West, Kodiak, AK 99615. It is run by the Alaska Department of Corrections. Inmate lookup is available through the Alaska DOC Offender Locator online. Arrest records and booking data are public under AS 40.25.110 through AS 40.25.140.
Kodiak Island Borough Phone Directory
The Kodiak Island Borough office is also at 710 Mill Bay Road, Kodiak, AK 99615. The Borough Clerk is at (907) 486-9310, fax (907) 486-9391. The clerk keeps borough-level records including deeds, mortgages, liens, and plat maps. Kodiak is its own recording district under Alaska's statewide recording system.
Key borough department numbers:
- Mayor's Office: (907) 486-9301
- Assessing Department: (907) 486-9330
- Finance: (907) 486-9323
- Community Development: (907) 486-9363
- Engineering/Facilities: (907) 486-9343
Recording fees in Alaska are set by statute. The standard rate is $20 for the first page and $5 for each page after that. The borough offers online property search at the borough website where you can look up properties by owner name, parcel number, or address to see assessment info and tax history.
State Services Phone Numbers for Kodiak
The Alaska DNR Recorder's Office in Anchorage at (907) 269-8876 handles all recorded documents. Search land records for free at the Alaska Land Records Information System. Criminal background checks cost $20 through the Department of Public Safety online portal. The main DPS phone is (907) 269-5511.
Vital records come from the Bureau of Vital Statistics. The Anchorage office is at (907) 269-0991 and the Juneau office at (907) 465-3391. Birth certificates are $30 for the first copy and $25 for each additional copy. Death certificates are $30. Processing takes about 4 to 6 weeks by mail.
Court records for Kodiak can be searched through CourtView on the Alaska Court System website. The court system has a directory page for Kodiak with specific hours, phone numbers, and mailing address. Copy fees are standard statewide at $5 for the first page.
Note: The U.S. Coast Guard has a large base on Kodiak Island, one of the biggest Coast Guard installations in the country. Coast Guard records are federal and are not covered by the Alaska Public Records Act.
How to Request Kodiak Public Records
Getting public records in Kodiak depends on what you need. City records go through the City Clerk at 907.486.8636. Borough records go through the Borough Clerk at (907) 486-9310. Court records use CourtView or the court clerk. Police records come from the Kodiak Police Department at (907) 486-8000, and trooper records from the Alaska State Troopers.
The Alaska Public Records Act applies to all state and local agencies. Be as clear as you can about what records you want. Include names, dates, case numbers, or any other details that help the office find the right documents. Agencies can charge for copies and for search time in some cases, so the more specific you are, the less it will cost.
Kodiak Phone Directory Summary
Kodiak has both a city and a borough government, each with its own set of records and phone numbers. The city clerk at 907.486.8636 handles city records. The borough clerk at (907) 486-9310 handles borough records. The police at (907) 486-8000 cover city law enforcement, and the troopers at (907) 486-4121 cover the rest of the island. Knowing which office holds the record you need will save you time and phone calls.
For property questions, the borough assessing office at (907) 486-9330 is your first call. For recorded documents, the DNR Recorder's Office in Anchorage is the filing point. Court records go through CourtView or the court clerk. The Alaska Public Records Act gives you the right to request records from any of these offices. Processing times and fees vary by office, but the law requires a response within a reasonable time frame.
The Alaska state portal is a helpful backup for finding state agency numbers that serve the Kodiak area. Many state services are coordinated through the Anchorage offices, so long-distance calls or online systems are often the way to go for state-level records. The Alaska State Archives in Juneau is also worth checking for historical records from the Kodiak area dating back to the territorial era.