Whether you're refinancing, settling an estate, or just trying to find a copy of your house deed in Honolulu County, Hawaii, DeedNow gets you the official recorded document for $49.99 without leaving home.
The City and County of Honolulu is consolidated with the island of Oʻahu. Unusually for the U.S., all of Hawaii's real-property records — including every transfer on Oʻahu — are filed centrally with the state Bureau of Conveyances rather than at the county level.
Hawaii is unusual: all real-property documents statewide are recorded with the state Bureau of Conveyances in Honolulu. For property in Honolulu County, that means deeds, mortgages, and other real-property instruments are filed with the Hawaii Bureau of Conveyances.
Honolulu, HI
Visit the official Bureau of Conveyances website
For walk-in hours, copy fees, or in-person requests, contact the Bureau of Conveyances office directly. To skip the trip and have the recorded deed emailed to you, use the search at the top of this page.
DeedNow retrieves the most recent recorded deed of conveyance for the address you search.
Most Honolulu County deed requests fall into one of five buckets. If you're in any of these, the official recorded deed is what you need:
The Hawaii Bureau of Conveyances accepts several different document types, but the ones most commonly recorded under Hawaii law are Warranty Deed, Quitclaim Deed, Apartment Deed, and Mortgage. The DeedNow service returns whatever the most recent recorded deed of conveyance is for the address you search — most often a warranty or grant deed showing the current owner.
If you specifically need a different recorded instrument — for example a quitclaim, trustee's deed, or a release — note which document you need when you place your Honolulu County order and we'll target it during retrieval.
When the Bureau of Conveyances records a deed in Hawaii, the document itself is the official evidence of ownership. A typical recorded Honolulu County deed includes:
When Honolulu County property owners need an official deed, they typically choose between three options:
Drive to Honolulu, find parking, wait in line, and request a copy from a clerk during business hours. Best if you already know the book/page or instrument number and need a certified copy the same day.
Most Hawaii counties offer a public records search, but the interface is built for clerks and title professionals — you usually need a parcel number, an instrument number, or grantor/grantee name spelled exactly as recorded. Some counties charge per page.
Type the Honolulu County property address in the search box at the top of this page, pay $49.99 once, and we email you the official recorded deed PDF. No book/page lookup, no parcel number, no per-page fees. Most Honolulu County requests deliver in minutes; the rest land in your inbox within 24 hours.
The fastest way is to search the property address with DeedNow — we pull the most recent recorded deed from the Bureau of Conveyances (Hawaii Bureau of Conveyances) and email you the PDF for $49.99. You can also request a copy in person at the Bureau of Conveyances office in Honolulu, but you typically need to know the book/page or instrument number first.
DeedNow charges a flat $49.99 per official recorded deed in Honolulu County — pay once per deed, no subscriptions, no per-page fees. The Bureau of Conveyances office may charge a separate per-page copy fee if you request directly from them in person or by mail.
Most Honolulu County deed requests through DeedNow are delivered to your email within minutes. A small number of harder counties take up to 24 hours, depending on how the Bureau of Conveyances's public records system responds.
No. With DeedNow you can get a recorded copy of any Honolulu County property deed online for $49.99 without ever going to Honolulu. We retrieve the document from official Hawaii county records and email you the PDF — typically the same day, often within minutes.
One flat price. $49.99 per official recorded deed. No subscriptions, no hidden fees.
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