About U.S. District Courts

Whether you’re an attorney, clerk, human resources specialist, or court interpreter, there is a place for you to support the mission and work of the nation’s 94 U.S. District Courts, also called the trial courts.

District courts resolve disputes by determining the facts and applying legal principles. Trial courts include district judges, who handle most trials, and magistrate judges who assist district judges in preparing cases for trial and also conduct trials in misdemeanor cases.

There is at least one district court in each state and the District of Columbia. Four territories of the United States have district courts that hear federal cases, including bankruptcy cases: Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and the Northern Mariana Islands.

We invite you to learn more about us and join the people who work to help ensure equal justice under the law.

website icon
Website
employees icon
Employees
industry icon
Industry
Judiciary
description icon
Revenue
$500M–$1B
location icon
Phone number
(512) 916-5000
location icon
Headquarter
US
description icon
Founded
None

Frequently Asked Questions about U.S. District Courts

Who are the decision makers in U.S. District Courts?

The decision makers in U.S. District Courts are Fred Skaluba, Jennifer Gromek, Keith Newton, etc. Click to Find U.S. District Courts decision makers emails.

Where is U.S. District Courts headquarters located?

U.S. District Courts headquarters is located at US.

What is U.S. District Courts's annual revenue?

U.S. District Courts generates an estimated $500M–$1B annually, based on industry analysis and publicly available market data.

How can I contact U.S. District Courts?

You can contact U.S. District Courts by calling (512) 916-5000.

Supercharge your
Prospecting &
Outreach with
ContactOut

Search Portal

Find countless prospects outside of LinkedIn fast

Accelerate prospecting with instant access to 350M professionals from 40M companies with the right contact details.

Discover the source of our data

Learn more