How to Search Bibb County Records (Start Here)
Bibb County merged with the City of Macon in 2014 to form the consolidated Macon-Bibb County government. Court records still run through the Macon Judicial Circuit.
- Superior Court records: Clerk of Superior Court at maconbibb.us/superior-court. The public records search covers cases filed in Bibb Superior Court.
- Civil and Magistrate Court: Separate from Superior Court — case search at maconbibb.us/civil-magistrate-court/case-search. Handles small claims, evictions, and civil disputes.
- Property records: Tax Assessor's office through the consolidated Macon-Bibb government. Georgia uses Tax Assessors for property valuations — not Auditors or Appraisers.
- Marriage licenses: Probate Court — standard for Georgia counties.
Because of the city-county merger, many services that were split between Macon and Bibb County are now consolidated under maconbibb.us.
Official government databases are listed below, organized by record type.
Criminal & Court Records
Jail & Inmate Records
Property & Tax Records
Business, Voter & Other
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Macon-Bibb merger? ▼
In 2014, the City of Macon and Bibb County consolidated into a single government — Macon-Bibb County. Most county and city services now run through maconbibb.us. Court records still operate under the Macon Judicial Circuit.
How do I search Bibb County court records? ▼
Two separate courts to check. Superior Court records (felonies, major civil) are at maconbibb.us/superior-court. Civil and Magistrate Court (small claims, evictions) has its own case search at maconbibb.us/civil-magistrate-court/case-search.
Can I search Georgia court records statewide? ▼
Georgia's e-Access system at georgiacourts.gov/eaccess-court-records provides some statewide court case access, but you need an account. For Bibb County specifically, the local court websites give more complete results.
Where are Bibb County property records? ▼
The Tax Assessor handles property valuations — Georgia uses "Tax Assessor," not "Auditor" or "Appraiser." For recorded deeds and plats, check the Clerk of Superior Court, which also serves as the recorder for the county.