Get the official recorded deed for any property in Ohio for $49.99. No trip to the County Recorder office, no per-page fees.
Ohio counties record real-property documents through the elected County Recorder. That means when a Ohio property changes hands — through a sale, gift, inheritance, or refinance — the deed is filed with the County Recorder, where it becomes part of the public record.
The most common document types recorded under Ohio law include General Warranty Deed, Limited Warranty Deed, Quitclaim Deed, and Survivorship Deed. DeedNow returns the most recent recorded deed of conveyance for whichever Ohio address you search.
The County Recorder office in each Ohio county maintains the official index of real-property documents. Each recorded Ohio deed typically includes:
DeedNow lists the Ohio counties below for direct browsing. If your county isn't listed individually, you can still get a recorded deed — just start a Ohio deed search with the property address.
Ohio counties record real-property documents through the elected County Recorder. The most common document types recorded under Ohio law are General Warranty Deed, Limited Warranty Deed, Quitclaim Deed, and Survivorship Deed.
DeedNow charges a flat $49.99 per official recorded Ohio deed — one price, pay once, no subscriptions. The County Recorder office in each county may also charge a per-page copy fee if you request the document directly.
DeedNow lists 2 Ohio counties individually below, but we can pull a recorded deed from any Ohio county. Just search the property address and we'll route the request to the correct County Recorder.
One flat price. $49.99 per official recorded deed. No subscriptions, no hidden fees.
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