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Alternative ways to request records Complete the Public Records Request Form and email it to Ombuds.PRA@kingcounty.gov. Call us at (206) 477-1050. Fax a request (206) 296-0948. View in person schedule with us.
Clerks Office (for filing documents and getting copies of court records): 206-296-9300 or clerksofficecustomerservice@kingcounty.gov or.
King County Superior Court is a general jurisdiction trial court with responsibility for: Civil matters involving more than $300, unlawful detainers, and injunctions; Felony criminal cases; Misdemeanor criminal cases not otherwise provided for by law;
Fill out the Will Repository Cover Sheet. Bring will and completed coversheet to Clerks Office, and pay the $20.00 fee to leave the will in the Clerks Will Repository. If you add information to your will, such as a Codicil, you must pay another $20.00 fee. If you take your will out, there is no fee.
To obtain certified copies, send identifying information (parties names, type of document, year recorded) and appropriate fees to King County Records, 500 Fourth Avenue, Room 430, Seattle WA 98104 or visit our office during the hours, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday (except holidays).
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Clerks Office (for filing documents and getting copies of court records): 206-296-9300 or clerksofficecustomerservice@kingcounty.gov or.
King County Superior Court is a general jurisdiction trial court with responsibility for: Civil matters involving more than $300, unlawful detainers, and injunctions; Felony criminal cases; Misdemeanor criminal cases not otherwise provided for by law;
expandmore. You can bring your will and completed coversheet to the King County Superior Court Clerks Office in Seattle, or to the Maleng Regional Justice Center Clerks Office in Kent.
All wills filed with the clerk of the superior court must be noted in the record required to be kept under RCW 36.23. 030(7). They may be withdrawn from the record on the order of the court.
Washington law no longer requires a Death Certificate for the Decedent to open a probate; nevertheless, some Judges may wish to review one, for example, to obtain independent evidence whether Decedent was survived by a spouse.

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