Litigation Support

Locate a Defendant for Service by Publication

Service by publication is the remedy of last resort, the method a court authorizes only when a defendant genuinely cannot be found and every ordinary avenue has failed. It is also the most fragile way to get a defendant into a case: a notice printed in a newspaper the defendant will almost certainly never read, followed by a default judgment that can be reopened years later if the defendant resurfaces and shows they were findable all along. The way you protect the judgment is to avoid publication whenever you can. We run the lawful, nationwide locate that surfaces a current, serviceable address, so your process server can put the papers in the defendant’s hands and you never have to rely on publication at all. When the person truly cannot be found, we give you the documented search a court requires to authorize publication. We locate; we do not serve papers and we do not give legal advice.

Documented Search Trail Nationwide Locate Since 2004
Last ResortWhat Publication Is
Court OrderRequired to Authorize It
ReopenableDefault Judgment Risk
Since 2004Lawful Skip Tracing

The Short Version

Service by publication is what a court authorizes when a defendant cannot be located any other way: instead of the summons being handed to the defendant, a legal notice runs in a court-approved newspaper for a set number of weeks, and after that window the case can proceed to a default. It is a genuine remedy, but it is the weakest form of notice the law recognizes, and a judgment built on it is the easiest to attack. A defendant who later surfaces and shows the court they could have been found can move to reopen the case and unwind the default, sometimes long after it is entered. The way to keep your judgment safe is to serve the real person whenever that is possible. That is where we come in. Our investigation team runs a lawful, nationwide locate across current and historical address records, relatives and known associates, employment and business filings, and other permissible-purpose sources, with the goal of surfacing a current, serviceable address so your process server can serve the defendant in person and you never touch publication. Only when the person genuinely cannot be found does publication become the path, and at that point the court still requires proof of the search before it will authorize the notice. We locate and document. We do not serve the papers, petition the court, or give legal advice, and results are always for a lawful, permissible purpose.

Watch: Locating a Defendant for Publication

Why publication is the last resort, and why finding the real defendant beats it.

▶ Video Overview

What Service by Publication Actually Requires

Publication is the exception, and the court treats it that way.

Personal service, handing the summons and complaint to the defendant or to someone authorized to accept it, is the default because it is the method most likely to give a defendant real notice that they are being sued. That notice is a due-process guarantee, not a formality. Service by publication, sometimes called constructive service, substitutes a legal notice printed in a newspaper or authorized outlet for that hand delivery. Because a notice buried in the classifieds almost never reaches the person it names, courts allow it only as a last resort, and only once the plaintiff shows that reasonable, diligent efforts to serve the defendant a better way have failed.

Publication does not happen on its own say-so. It requires a court order, and the plaintiff has to petition for one, showing the judge that the defendant cannot be personally served despite reasonable effort. The exact procedure is set by each court’s rules and by state statute, and the federal framework for how a summons is served lives in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and their state analogs. Only after the court is satisfied and enters the order does the notice actually run. This gatekeeping is deliberate: because a printed notice almost never reaches the person it names, the law treats the judge’s sign-off as the safeguard that stands in for the notice the defendant will never receive. What gets you across that threshold is a real, current locate that first tries to find the defendant, and, when it cannot, a documented record of that effort. The locate is the part we handle.

How Publication Actually Runs

The newspaper, the posting, and the calendar that turns a notice into a default.

Once a court authorizes constructive service, publication is a mechanical, calendar-driven process, and every step has to be done to the letter or the notice can be challenged. The order usually directs the notice into a newspaper of general circulation in a specific county, often the county where the action is filed or where the defendant was last known to reside. It cannot be any paper you like; many jurisdictions maintain a list of qualified legal-notice publications, and some route the notice through the clerk’s office or a designated official paper. The notice itself has a required form: the court and case caption, the parties, a short description of the action, and a deadline by which the defendant must respond or answer.

The notice then has to run for a set period, commonly once a week for several consecutive weeks, with the exact number of insertions fixed by the statute or the order, four consecutive weeks being a familiar pattern in many states. Where a defendant has a known mailing address that simply cannot be personally served, or where the property in a case is at a known location, the rules frequently add a mail-and-post requirement on top of the newspaper run: a copy mailed to the last known address and, in some actions, physically posted at the courthouse or on the property. After the last insertion, the response clock runs, and only when that window closes without an answer can the plaintiff move for a default. The newspaper then issues an affidavit or proof of publication that goes into the court file as evidence the notice actually ran as ordered.

None of this is optional or approximate. Publishing in the wrong paper, running one insertion short, skipping a required mailing, or moving for default before the response window closes are the kinds of technical defects that give a defendant a clean opening to void the service later. That fragility is the whole reason a solid locate that leads to personal service is the outcome to aim for.

How a Publication Judgment Comes Undone

A default served by publication is the easiest to attack. These are the openings that let a defendant reopen it.

The Defendant Was Findable

The single biggest risk. If the defendant resurfaces and shows a routine search would have found them, the court can vacate the default for want of proper notice.

Wrong or Unqualified Paper

Publishing outside the ordered county, or in a paper that is not a qualified legal-notice publication of general circulation, can make the whole run defective.

Short or Broken Run

One insertion fewer than the statute requires, or a gap in the consecutive weeks, is a technical failure a defendant can raise to unwind the judgment.

Missed Mail-and-Post

Where a known last address triggers a mailing, or the action requires posting, skipping that companion step leaves the constructive service incomplete.

Default Taken Too Soon

Moving for default before the response window that follows the last insertion has fully closed is a timing defect that can void the judgment.

No Proof of Publication

Without the newspaper’s affidavit of publication in the file, there is no record the notice ran as ordered, and the default has nothing to stand on.

How We Try to Find the Defendant

Every lane below is a chance to reach a real address and skip publication entirely.

Publication is the fallback, not the plan. The plan is to locate the actual defendant, and that means working every lane where a current, serviceable address might surface before anyone concludes the person is unreachable. Our investigation team runs these for a defendant locate:

Address and residency history

Current and historical address records, utility and change-of-address indicators, and cross-references that show where the person actually lives now versus where they used to. A verified current address is the result that lets you serve personally and skip publication entirely. When you need the underlying method in plain terms, our guide to finding a current address through public records explains the sources.

Relatives and known associates

Courts specifically expect diligent inquiry of family members and associates who would plausibly know the defendant’s whereabouts. We identify likely relatives and connected parties so that avenue is on the record, not skipped.

Employment and business filings

Employer indicators, professional licenses, and business registrations that point to a current workplace or a registered-agent address. If the defendant runs a company, that can open a separate serviceable path, which our overview of serving an LLC or corporation covers.

Public records and litigation

Property ownership, court and judgment records, and other filings that both help locate the person and demonstrate to the court that the easy, readily available records were actually checked. For the specific problem of a party who dodges the server, our page on how to find someone to serve a lawsuit goes deeper on evasion patterns.

Personal Service vs. Default by Publication

Two ways a defendant enters your case, and why one is far sturdier than the other.

What the Judgment Rests OnDefault by PublicationPersonal Service After a Locate
Actual notice to defendantAlmost none; a paper they never readThe summons in the defendant’s hands
Court steps to get therePetition, order, timed newspaper run, proof of publicationA verified address handed to your process server
Ways it can be attackedWrong paper, short run, missed mailing, early default, findable defendantVery few; actual notice was given
How we help OURSDocumented search a court needs to authorize the noticeThe current, serviceable address that makes it possible
Risk of being reopenedHigh; the weakest notice the law allowsLow; a clean, defensible judgment
Which you should wantOnly when the person truly cannot be foundEvery time it is achievable

The table makes the strategy plain: publication is not the win, it is the consolation prize. A findable defendant served in person is the win, because a judgment resting on actual notice is far harder to unwind than one resting on a notice nobody read. This is why we push the locate hard before anyone reaches for publication, and why the money spent finding the person is cheap next to a default that gets vacated a year later.

How We Work Your Locate

From intake to a serviceable address or a documented dead-end.

1

Send Us What You Have

The defendant’s full name and any identifiers you hold: last known address, date of birth, phone, employer, the case caption, and the failed-service history. More detail sharpens the search.

2

We Run the Multi-Source Search

Our team works address history, relatives and associates, employment and business filings, and public records in parallel, recording what each source returns.

3

You Get One of Two Results

Either a verified current address to serve in person and skip publication, or a documented record showing the person truly cannot be found so the court can authorize the notice.

4

Your Counsel Takes It From There

Your process server serves the papers, or your attorney petitions for the order for publication and manages the newspaper run. We do not serve, petition, or give legal advice.

For a straightforward defendant locate, an initial result typically comes back within 24 hours, though a genuinely evasive subject or a thin identifier set can take longer. We would rather give you a complete, defensible search than a fast, shallow one, because the difference between finding the defendant and defaulting them by publication is the difference between a judgment that holds and one that can be reopened.

Who Orders a Defendant Locate

Litigation professionals stalled at a defendant who has to be served and cannot be found.

Litigators

Serve in person, avoid publication

Paralegals

Get the locate before the publication run

Process Servers

Get a fresh serviceable address

Collections Firms

Serve a debtor to move a case

Family Law

Locate an absent party to proceed

Pro-Se Plaintiffs

Meet the search the court demands

Whatever the case type, the ask is the same: find the person so you can serve them in person, and only if that genuinely fails, establish that publication is warranted. Our defendant locates draw on the same lawful public-records and skip-tracing sources behind our broader work in people search and litigation-support locates like the accident-witness locate. If you are still deciding whether to hire out the search or attempt it in-house, the earlier walkthrough of how to find someone to serve papers lays out what a court-ready effort involves. Where the search fails and publication is the path, the court will want the effort documented; the drafting side of that record, the affidavit of diligent search your attorney signs, is a separate topic we cover on its own page. Tell us where the trail went cold and we take it from there. To find the right court and its local service rules, the federal government’s court directory is a useful starting point.

Our Commitment

We do not promise that every defendant can be found, and we never manufacture a result. We run a genuine, lawful, multi-source locate and report exactly what the records show: a verified, serviceable address if the person is findable, or a documented dead-end if they are not, so publication rests on a real search rather than a bare assertion. We locate and document. We do not serve papers, petition the court, or give legal advice. Honest, permissible-purpose skip tracing since 2004.

People Locator Skip Tracing Investigation Team — investigators conducting skip tracing and public-records research since 2004, working lawful, investigative-grade sources for legitimate purposes only. Last reviewed 2026. This page is general information, not legal advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do you serve the papers or petition the court for publication?

No. We locate the defendant and, where the person cannot be found, document the search. Serving the summons, petitioning for the order for publication, and managing the newspaper run are steps handled by your attorney, process server, or you as the party. We provide the lawful locate that comes first, not legal services or legal advice.

Why is publication such a last resort?

Because it is the weakest form of notice the law recognizes: a legal notice printed in a newspaper the defendant will almost certainly never see. A court authorizes it only when personal service is genuinely impossible, and a judgment built on it is the easiest to attack, which is exactly why finding the real defendant is the outcome to aim for.

How does service by publication actually work?

After a court authorizes it, a legal notice runs in a court-approved newspaper of general circulation, commonly once a week for a set number of consecutive weeks. Some cases add a mailing to the last known address or a courthouse or property posting. Once the run finishes and the response window closes, the plaintiff can move for a default, and the newspaper issues a proof of publication for the file.

Can a default judgment obtained by publication be reopened?

Yes, and that is the central risk. If the defendant later surfaces and shows a reasonable search would have found them, or that the publication was defective, a court can vacate the default, sometimes long after entry. A locate that leads to personal service produces a far sturdier judgment, which is why we push to find the person first.

What do I get if you actually find the defendant?

You get a verified current address so a process server can serve in person. That is the better outcome, because personal service gives the defendant real notice and cannot be attacked the way a publication-based default can. In that case you usually do not need publication at all, which is precisely the point of ordering the locate.

Can you search for a defendant who moved out of state?

Yes. Our locates are nationwide, drawing on address history, relatives and associates, employment, and public records across states. Where the defendant relocated is often exactly why prior service failed, and a multi-state search is what surfaces the current location or establishes that personal service is not possible.

How fast can you turn around a defendant locate?

For a straightforward locate with solid identifiers, an initial result typically comes back within 24 hours. A genuinely evasive subject or a thin starting file can take longer. When publication is on the table we prioritize a complete search over a fast one, because a findable defendant missed now becomes a reopened judgment later.

Is this legal, and is my case an appropriate use?

Locating a defendant to effect service in active litigation is a recognized lawful, permissible purpose. We work only for legitimate purposes and use lawful public-records and skip-tracing sources. Tell us the case context up front so we can confirm the request is appropriate before we begin.

Need a Defendant Located? Start the Search.

We run the lawful, nationwide locate that finds a serviceable address so you can serve in person and keep your judgment clean, or documents the search when publication is truly the only path left. Contact us to get started.

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