Free Texas Warrant Tools
The warrant tools
Both tools run entirely in your browser — no account, no court-record lookup, no personal data sent anywhere. Use them to get your bearings, then follow the plain-English guide they point you to or speak with a lawyer before you act.
How these tools help — and what they can’t do
The tools are a starting point, not a substitute for a lawyer or an official court record search. They ask you a short series of questions and return a plain-English orientation — which warrant type most likely fits your situation, and which factors push toward or away from a voluntary surrender.
Neither tool queries court databases, accesses criminal records, or stores any information you enter. They work the same way a knowledgeable friend would work through the problem with you: by asking the right questions and pointing you toward the right next step. The output is informational only and does not constitute legal advice for your specific case.
To confirm whether a warrant actually exists and which court issued it, read how to find out if you have a warrant. To understand the difference between warrant types before you use the identifier, the who issues Texas warrants page explains the courts and authority behind each kind.
The only way to confirm an active warrant is to check the issuing court directly, hire an attorney to run a confidential search, or contact the relevant clerk’s office. The tools on this page cannot do that — they interpret the facts you enter, nothing more.
How L&L Law Group helps
L and L Law Group is a Frisco criminal-defense firm led by Co-Founding Partners Reggie London and Njeri London. The firm confirms the warrant, arranges a walk-through bond where possible, files motions to recall, and appears with you to resolve the underlying case.
The tools on this page are the educational half of what the firm offers. The other half is direct representation: confirming whether a warrant is active, negotiating a bond amount, arranging a planned surrender so you are not taken by surprise, and appearing in court to clear the underlying matter. L&L Law Group’s criminal-defense practice handles warrant matters in North Texas courts every week. A free consultation is the right next step once you have a sense of what you are facing.
Worried about a warrant? Start here.
Tell us a little about the situation and a member of the L&L Law Group team will get back to you. This form is confidential and there is no charge for the initial consultation.
Submitting this form does not create an attorney–client relationship. Please do not share confidential details until a conflicts check is complete.
Frequently asked questions
Are these tools free to use?
Yes. Both tools are entirely free, require no account, and run directly in your browser. There is nothing to download and no personal information is collected or transmitted.
Do the tools access court records or search for my warrant?
No. The tools do not connect to any court database, clerk system, or warrant registry. They work only with the answers you enter. To confirm an actual warrant, you need to contact the issuing court, have an attorney run a confidential check, or use the official methods described in the guide on how to find out if you have a warrant.
Is the output from a tool legal advice?
No. The tools provide general orientation based on how Texas warrant law works, not legal advice for your specific situation. The right course of action depends on facts the tool cannot fully evaluate — the charge, the court, prior history, and the likely bond. Speak with a licensed Texas attorney before you act on anything a tool suggests.
What should I do after I use a tool?
Read the guide the tool points you to for a fuller explanation, then contact a criminal-defense attorney to confirm the warrant and plan your next move. Acting on a Texas warrant without counsel — especially for surrender — can have consequences that a planned, attorney-assisted approach avoids. A free consultation with the defense team at L&L Law Group is a good place to start.
This page is general legal information about Texas law, not legal advice for your specific situation. Statutes and court procedures change; verify current requirements with the relevant court or a licensed Texas attorney. Last reviewed June 20, 2026.