Travis County Reality Check
- Travis County filings go through the Travis County District Clerk at the Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility. Fees: $450 per civil petition.
- All Travis County civil petitions — including expunctions — are filed through eFileTexas. Walk-in filings at the clerk's cashier window are accepted but still land in the same portal queue.
- Travis County has a dedicated expunction review at the District Attorney's office. That is why clean petitions move faster here than in some other counties — and why defective petitions get caught faster and denied.
- One missed respondent and you start over. Travis County is a common target of private background-check vendors (Checkr, HireRight, Sterling, First Advantage). Miss any vendor and your "expunged" record keeps showing up on jobs in Austin, Round Rock, Pflugerville, and across Central Texas.
- A denied Travis County expunction under CCP 55.02 can be with prejudice. Fix it before you file, not after.
- Filing in Travis County — the Quick Reference
- Where to File: Travis County District Clerk & Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility
- Travis County Filing Fees
- Who Qualifies Under CCP 55.01
- Every Travis County Respondent You Must Serve
- The 12-Step Travis County Walkthrough
- The eFileTexas Nightmare (Watch This)
- Realistic Travis County Timeline
- Travis County Local Quirks
- 10 Travis County DIY Mistakes
- DIY vs. Attorney vs. Expunction360
- Travis County FAQ
If your arrest, dismissal, acquittal, or no-bill happened in Travis County — anywhere from downtown Austin to Pflugerville to Lakeway to West Lake Hills to Bee Cave to Manor to Del Valle — your expunction petition goes to a Travis County district court, filed through the Travis County District Clerk at the Heman Marion Sweatt Travis County Courthouse, 1000 Guadalupe Street. Civil expunction matters are routed through the Civil and Family Courts Facility at 1700 Guadalupe; criminal records originate from the Blackwell-Thurman Criminal Justice Center at 509 W. 11th. Venue follows the arrest, not your current address.
Travis County has 9 civil district courts plus 8 criminal district courts and 8 county courts at law. Expunction petitions go to a civil district court — not a criminal court. Travis is one of the few large Texas counties where the prosecutor's title is "District Attorney" rather than "Criminal District Attorney"; the Travis County DA's civil division reviews expunction petitions on a structured docket and typically responds within 30–45 days.
Travis is generally a fast county for clean expunctions: DA response runs 30–45 days, and the District Clerk's signed-order distribution to DPS averages 35–50 days post-grant. The local quirk that catches DIY filers is the city's de-criminalization landscape. Austin voters passed Proposition A in May 2022 deprioritizing low-level marijuana enforcement, but historical APD arrests from before May 2022 still need petitions to clear and they don't auto-expunge. The same is true for Class C arrests on the UT-Austin campus and for Capitol-area arrests by the DPS Capitol Police.
This guide walks through the Travis County expunction process as it stands in 2026 — court, fees, addresses, respondent agencies, and the local quirks that catch DIY filers. For the statewide framework, our Texas expunction pillar guide covers Chapter 55 in detail.
What Makes Travis County Different
Six Travis-specific factors that don't appear in generic Texas expunction templates.
- Two courthouses, two functions. Travis County's civil filings (expunctions, nondisclosures, civil petitions) route through the Civil and Family Courts Facility at 1700 Guadalupe. The Blackwell-Thurman Criminal Justice Center at 509 W. 11th holds the criminal docket. Walk-in pro-se filers occasionally go to the wrong building first; only the Civil and Family Courts Facility (or e-filing routed there) handles civil expunction petitions.
- Pre-2022 APD marijuana arrests do not auto-expunge. Austin Prop A (May 2022) deprioritized future low-level marijuana enforcement and ended most subsequent arrests for those offenses. It did not expunge any historical record. APD arrests from 2010, 2015, 2019 — those still sit on records and require a CCP §55.01 petition to clear. There is no automatic-clear mechanism under state law for those historical cases.
- APD respondent layering. Austin Police Department is one respondent. The APD Records Division at 715 E. 8th is a separate processing unit; service to APD's main address can stall while it routes internally. APD also has a body-cam unit (separate records system since 2017) that's been an issue for clean record clearing — granted expunctions sometimes don't reach the body-cam archive without separate notification.
- UTPD and Capitol Police. UT-Austin Police Department maintains its own arrest records independent of APD; Class C and felony arrests on the UT campus by UTPD list UTPD as the arresting agency. The DPS Capitol Police covers the Texas Capitol complex (and arrests there are usually by Capitol Police, not APD). Both must be named as separate respondents when relevant.
- Travis-Williamson straddle. The Travis-Williamson county line runs through several north Austin neighborhoods. Parts of Pflugerville, Cedar Park, and Round Rock are in Travis County; parts are in Williamson. The petition files in the county of arrest, not the county where the suburb's city hall sits. Pull the arresting agency's incident report to verify county before drafting.
- Travis County Sheriff's jail records. Travis County Sheriff's Office maintains the jail booking records (Travis County Correctional Complex in Del Valle) independently of any city PD. The Sheriff is a required respondent for any Travis County arrest that resulted in booking, even if the arresting agency was APD or a suburban department.
Filing in Travis County — the Quick Reference
Travis County District Clerk
- Filing address
- Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility
1700 Guadalupe St., Austin, TX 78701 - Phone
- (512) 854-9457
- Hours
- Monday–Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
- Filing method
- eFileTexas (primary) or in-person at the clerk's window
- Filing fee
- $450 for a civil expunction petition (passed through)
- Fee waivers
- Accepted under TRCP 145 Statement of Inability to Afford Payment
Where to File — Travis County District Clerk & Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility
Every civil expunction petition in Travis County is filed with the Travis County District Clerk. The clerk's main office is on the second floor of the Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility at 1700 Guadalupe St., Austin, TX 78701. That is the building you have probably driven past a hundred times on I-35 just south of downtown Austin.
The civil expunction petition is routed to one of Travis County's district courts — typically one of the Criminal District Courts (1–7) if the underlying case was criminal, or one of the numbered district courts (the 14th, 44th, 68th, 95th, 101st, 116th, 134th, 160th, 162nd, 191st, 192nd, 193rd, 194th, 298th, and others) for civil expunction venue assignments. You do not choose the court — it is assigned by the clerk based on the county's random assignment system.
In-person filings at the cashier window are still accepted but rare. Most pro-se filers use eFileTexas from home. The cashier window is useful for one thing: certified copies. You will need them after the judge signs, and picking them up in person saves 1–2 weeks of mail turnaround.
Travis County Filing Fees
Travis County sets its own civil filing fees within the limits of Texas state statute. The fee schedule changes annually. Rather than list a specific number that will be wrong by the time you read this, pull the current amount directly from the source:
Travis County District Clerk — Civil/Family/Juvenile Court Fees
$450 for an original civil petition (which is how an expunction is filed). Always verify on the official page before filing.
Other Travis County costs to budget for:
| Item | Typical Cost in Travis County |
|---|---|
| District Clerk filing fee | $450 (confirm current) |
| Certified copies of case records (before filing) | $15–$40 at Travis County District Clerk cashier |
| Certified mail to respondents (10–15 agencies) | $80–$180 |
| Certified copies of the signed order (one per agency) | $30–$90 at Travis County District Clerk |
| Postage to distribute signed order | $30–$80 |
| Total DIY out-of-pocket (non-indigent) | ~$450–$700 |
Indigency waivers under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 145 are accepted by Travis County but reviewed carefully. The clerk's office requires a completed Statement of Inability to Afford Payment and may request follow-up documentation. Most pro-se filers do not qualify.
Who Qualifies Under CCP 55.01
The eligibility rules for a Travis County expunction are the same statewide Texas rules under Chapter 55 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. You qualify if any of the following apply to your Travis County case:
- Acquittal at trial — 55.01(a)(1)(A). File immediately.
- No-bill by a Travis County grand jury — 55.01(a)(2)(A)(ii). File after waiting period.
- Dismissal by the Travis County DA after waiting period — 55.01(a)(2)(A)(i).
- Arrested by a Travis County agency, never charged, statute of limitations passed — 55.01(a)(2)(B).
- Class C misdemeanor deferred adjudication completed — 180 days after completion.
- Identity theft — someone used your name when arrested in Travis County — 55.01(d), no waiting period.
- Pardon for innocence — 55.01(a)(1)(C).
Waiting periods run from the arrest date: 180 days for Class C, 1 year for Class A/B misdemeanor, 3 years for felony. For a full breakdown of the 15+ eligibility scenarios under 55.01, read our Texas expunction pillar guide.
The Travis County DA's office dismisses cases with different disposition codes depending on the reason for dismissal — "DA dismissal," "dismissed in the interest of justice," "dismissed on motion of defendant," etc. Some disposition codes trigger immediate expunction eligibility; others require the full waiting period. Pull the specific disposition order from the Travis County District Clerk before you draft anything. The wrong code on your petition = automatic denial.
Travis County Eligibility in 10 Minutes
Pulling a disposition from Travis County District Clerk, matching it to the right 55.01 subsection, and verifying the waiting period — we do this every day. A free 10-minute eligibility check saves you from filing on the wrong theory.
Every Travis County Respondent You Must Serve
A Texas expunction only binds the agencies you list in the petition and serve under CCP 55.02. Miss one and that agency keeps the record on file forever. Here is the baseline respondent list for a Travis County expunction — the minimum, before you add vendor-specific respondents:
| Agency | Service Address / Note |
|---|---|
| Texas Department of Public Safety | Crime Records Service, P.O. Box 4143, Austin, TX 78765-4143 |
| Federal Bureau of Investigation (via DPS) | Served through DPS — DPS forwards the order to FBI CJIS in Clarksburg, WV |
| Arresting agency (Austin PD, suburban PD, DPS troopers, Travis County Sheriff) | Check the arrest report for the exact agency and serve its records division |
| Travis County Sheriff's Department | Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility, 1700 Guadalupe St., Austin, TX 78701 |
| Travis County Criminal District Attorney | Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility, 1700 Guadalupe St., Austin, TX 78701 |
| Travis County District Clerk | Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility, 2nd Floor, 1700 Guadalupe St., Austin, TX 78701 |
| Municipal Court (if arrest by Austin PD, Class C) | Austin Municipal Court, 6800 Airport Blvd., Austin, TX 78752 |
| Texas Department of Transportation (if DWI) | Driver Responsibility Program, 6760 N. Congress Ave., Austin, TX 78752 |
| Private background-check vendors | Checkr, HireRight, Sterling, First Advantage, Accurate Background, GoodHire, and others — the vendor database is custom per filing |
For a typical Travis County case, expect 10–15 respondents total. DWI cases and deferred adjudications sometimes run 14–18. Every one has to be listed in both the petition and the proposed order, and every one has to be served by certified mail with return receipt requested.
Central Texas is one of the heaviest background-check markets in the country. If you went through a job application or apartment lease during the pendency of your case, there is a very high probability that Checkr, HireRight, or Sterling ran the record. Those vendors are not on any official state list — you build your own service list, and if you miss one, your "expunged" arrest will keep showing up on every Central Texas job you apply for.
The 12-Step Travis County DIY Walkthrough
Step 1 — Pull Travis County case records
Go to the Travis County District Clerk cashier window at the Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility (second floor), or request by mail. You need certified copies of: the charging document (information or indictment), the disposition (dismissal order, judgment of acquittal, or grand jury no-bill), and any deferred adjudication paperwork. Travis County charges a per-page copy fee plus a certification fee.
Step 2 — Verify your waiting period has run
Arrest date plus waiting period (180 days / 1 year / 3 years). Travis County judges do not hold petitions for ripeness.
Step 3 — Identify the correct CCP 55.01 subsection
Acquittal = 55.01(a)(1)(A). No-bill = 55.01(a)(2)(A)(ii). Dismissed after waiting period = 55.01(a)(2)(A)(i). Arrest never charged = 55.01(a)(2)(B). Travis County clerks accept the petition regardless of subsection, but the DA's review team catches the error.
Step 4 — Build the respondent list (10–15 agencies)
Start with the baseline list above, then add every private background-check vendor that may have touched the record. Vendor service addresses change — verify each one before mailing.
Step 5 — Draft the Petition for Expunction
Include: your legal name, aliases, DOB, sex, race, DL number, SSN, address at time of arrest, Travis County case number, offense, statute, arresting agency, date of arrest, date of disposition, statutory subsection, and the complete respondent list.
Step 6 — Draft the Proposed Order of Expunction
The order must mirror the petition. Any respondent listed in the petition but not in the order is not bound.
Step 7 — Register for eFileTexas
efile.txcourts.gov. Register as a pro-se filer. Add payment. Allow 30–60 minutes — the verification flow is notoriously clunky.
Step 8 — E-file the petition
Select Travis County. Select a district court (the clerk assigns; you are selecting the filing queue). Upload the petition, proposed order, and Civil Case Information Sheet. Pay the filing fee. You will receive an envelope number.
Step 9 — Serve every respondent by certified mail
Once the petition is file-stamped, print a copy for each respondent along with the proposed order and a cover letter. Mail each by certified mail, return receipt requested. Keep every green card.
Step 10 — The Travis County DA review window (30 days)
The Travis County DA's expunction review team has 30 days to respond. Most clean petitions are not opposed. If the DA objects — usually on a technical ground — a hearing is set.
Step 11 — Attend the hearing at Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility (if set)
Most uncontested Travis County expunction petitions are granted without a hearing. If one is set, it is at the Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility. Bring certified copies of everything.
Step 12 — Collect the signed order and distribute certified copies
Pick up certified copies at the Travis County District Clerk cashier window — one per respondent. Mail a certified copy to every respondent. Follow up with DPS 60 days later to confirm the state record has been updated.
Because Travis County volume is so high, clerks sometimes fall behind on distribution. We have seen Travis County expunction orders sit on a clerk's desk for 60 days after signing. If you do not mail the certified copies yourself — and confirm receipt at every agency — the order may technically be signed while your record remains active everywhere. The clerk's failure to distribute does not excuse the agency's retention. You are the one who has to chase it.
The eFileTexas Nightmare — Watch This Before You Start
Travis County civil filings go through eFileTexas just like every other Texas county. This is the portal walkthrough. Spend 10 minutes before your first filing — it will save you a weekend.
Travis County-specific e-filing traps:
- Court selection. Travis County has a large number of district courts. Selecting the wrong court queue does not get you denied, but it slows the review by days to weeks. The clerk reassigns, but the clock on the DA's response window does not reset cleanly.
- Travis County filing code. Look for the eFileTexas filing-type option matching "Petition for Expunction" or "Civil — Expunction." Avoid generic "Petition" or "Motion to Expunge" labels — they route to the wrong queue. If the dropdown lacks a clear match, the Travis County District Clerk's intake desk can confirm before you submit.
- Proposed order upload. Travis County requires the proposed order as a separate PDF attachment, not as part of the petition. Many pro-se filers concatenate them, which draws a rejection.
- Fee waiver flow. If you are filing a Statement of Inability, it has to go in first — as a separate envelope — and the clerk rules on it before the petition envelope is processed. Filing them together almost always bounces.
Realistic Travis County Timeline
Travis County is one of the faster counties in Texas for expunctions because the DA has a dedicated review process. Realistic numbers for a pro-se filing:
| Stage | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| Filing to file-stamp (if clean) | 2–5 business days |
| File-stamp to DA review complete | 30–45 days |
| DA review to judge signing | 30–60 days (no hearing) |
| Judge signing to DPS update | 45–90 days |
| DPS update to background-vendor refresh | 30–90 days |
| Total pro-se, no kickbacks | ~4–6 months |
| Total pro-se, with 1–2 kickbacks (typical) | ~7–10 months |
| Total pro-se with a denied petition | 12–24 months |
Travis County Local Quirks That Trip Up Pro-Se Filers
- UT Austin Police has its own arrest authority. An arrest on or near campus may have been made by UTPD — a separate agency from APD. List it correctly.
- Travis County Sheriff runs the jail at Del Valle. Always a respondent regardless of arresting agency.
- Austin is the state capital. DPS troopers and Texas Capitol Police generate additional arresting agencies downtown. Check the arrest report carefully.
- Travis County has a strong progressive DA tradition. Dismissals are common — which means many Austin cases are eligible for expunction rather than just non-disclosure.
- Suburbs straddle county lines. Pflugerville sits partly in Travis and partly in Williamson; Round Rock is entirely in Williamson. Verify county of arrest before filing.
10 Travis County DIY Mistakes That Get Petitions Denied
- Filing before the waiting period runs. Travis County courts do not hold for ripeness.
- Wrong CCP 55.01 subsection. The Travis County DA review team catches the wrong subsection fast. Denial.
- Missing the Travis County Sheriff as a respondent. Travis County Sheriff runs the county jail — they have booking records even when the arrest was by a city PD. Missing the Sheriff means the booking photo stays in the system.
- Outdated Travis County DA service address. The current Travis County DA service address is 509 W. 11th Street, Austin, TX 78701 (Blackwell-Thurman Criminal Justice Center). Old templates may point to a stale address — verify before mailing or your service will be returned.
- Case number typo. One digit wrong sends the filing to the wrong case jacket.
- Wrong filing code on eFileTexas. "Petition for Expunction" is the correct code — not "Petition."
- Not listing suburban PD as arresting agency. "Arrested in Travis County" and "Arrested by Austin Police Department" are different. Travis County has 25+ PDs. Get the right one.
- Concatenated petition and proposed order. Travis County requires separate PDFs. Concatenation = rejection.
- Forgetting the Municipal Court in Class C cases. Austin Municipal Court holds the file for Austin PD Class C arrests. Missing it leaves the record active there.
- Assuming the clerk distributes certified copies. Travis County volume means distribution is inconsistent. You have to mail the certified copies yourself — every respondent, every time.
Travis County. First-Try Filing.
We file expunctions in Travis County every week. We know the District Clerk, the DA's review team, the Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility hearing dockets, the current service addresses for every agency, and the private-vendor databases that pull Central Texas records. Flat fee. Money-back guarantee if the court denies a properly prepared petition.
DIY vs. Attorney vs. Expunction360 in Travis County
| Pro Se (DIY) | Attorney | Expunction360 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filing fee | $450 | $450 | $0 |
| Professional fee | $0 | $1,500–$3,500 | Flat, fraction of attorney cost |
| Your time commitment | 40–80 hours | ~1 hour (intake) | ~20 minutes (intake call) |
| Travis County-specific expertise | Self-taught | High | High |
| Respondent list (including Central Texas vendors) | Your research | Handled | Handled |
| Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility hearing prep | Alone | Attorney appears | Court appearance usually not needed. |
| Risk of denial | High | Low | Low (money-back guarantee) |
For a Travis County expunction with a clean dismissal, acquittal, or no-bill, our flat fee is the best value in the Central Texas market. For complex Travis County cases — contested petitions, identity theft (55.01(d)), pardons for innocence — a licensed Texas attorney may be the right call. We will tell you honestly which category you fall in on the intake call.
Travis County Expunction FAQ
The Civil and Family Courts Facility at 1700 Guadalupe Street, Austin, TX 78701 — that's where civil expunction petitions are heard. The Heman Marion Sweatt Courthouse at 1000 Guadalupe is the Travis County District Clerk's main office where filings can be lodged at the clerk's window or via eFileTexas. The Blackwell-Thurman Criminal Justice Center at 509 W. 11th holds the criminal docket; expunctions are not heard there.
No. Proposition A (May 2022) deprioritized future low-level marijuana enforcement; it does not retroactively clear any record. Pre-2022 APD marijuana arrests still sit on background checks and require a standard CCP §55.01 expunction petition to clear, assuming the case was dismissed, no-billed, or you were acquitted. There is no automatic-clear mechanism under Texas state law for those historical cases.
Most arrests at the Texas Capitol grounds and surrounding state-owned property are by the DPS Capitol Police (a division of Texas DPS). Pull your arrest report to confirm. If Capitol Police was the arresting agency, name them as a respondent in addition to Texas DPS — they maintain a separate records system and the standard "APD + Travis County Sheriff" template misses them. APD covers the city streets adjacent to the Capitol but not the Capitol grounds themselves.
Yes. UT-Austin Police Department maintains its own arrest and incident records independent of APD. Class C and felony arrests on the UT campus by UTPD list UTPD as the arresting agency. Name UTPD as a separate respondent on the petition. The same applies to Austin Community College Police and St. Edward's University Police for arrests on those respective campuses.
Through eFileTexas, routed to the Travis County District Clerk at the Civil and Family Courts Facility, 1700 Guadalupe St., Austin, TX 78701.
$450 for the civil filing fee. Travis County's fee schedule is updated annually — pull the current amount directly from the Travis County District Clerk fees page before filing. Credit card payments carry an additional 3% convenience fee.
Those are separate agencies from Austin PD. UTPD has its own records system; Capitol Police is a DPS subdivision. You must name the exact arresting agency as a respondent — "APD" will not cover a UTPD or Capitol Police arrest.
Travis County venue follows the arrest location, not your residence. If the arrest happened in the Travis County portion of Pflugerville, file in Travis. Round Rock is entirely in Williamson County — see our Williamson County guide.
Typical pro-se timeline is 5–8 months. Travis County moves efficiently on uncontested petitions.
The Travis County DA reviews every expunction petition and responds within the 30-day statutory window. Uncontested petitions typically move directly to the judge for signing.
One Free Call. One Clear Answer.
We handle Travis County expunction document prep — pulling records at the Travis County Civil and Family Courts Facility, drafting the petition, filing through eFileTexas, and serving every respondent. Free eligibility check in 10 minutes.