No, and that protection exists specifically for people in your situation.
Juvenile records are confidential by law in every state. Facilities that house juvenile offenders are not permitted to publish or share lists of current or former inmates, and your record is not accessible to the general public the way an adult criminal record would be. You will not show up in a public inmate search, and your case will not appear in court databases that anyone can browse online.
The reason this protection exists is that the juvenile justice system is built around the idea of rehabilitation rather than punishment. Exposing a young person's record publicly would follow them into adulthood and make it significantly harder to move forward, get a job, pursue education, or reintegrate into their community. The law recognizes that and shields that information accordingly.
There are limited exceptions worth knowing about. In some states, juveniles who are tried as adults for very serious offenses can have their records treated as adult records and made public. Certain agencies, like schools, law enforcement, and some licensing boards, may have access to juvenile records in specific circumstances. And in some states, records can become accessible once you reach adulthood if the offenses were serious enough.
But for standard juvenile adjudications, the record stays sealed. As you get older, understanding your specific state's expungement laws is worth looking into. In many states you can have a juvenile record formally expunged once you reach adulthood, which closes that chapter completely.