Curated by the Searchadex editorial team. Portal verified: June 2026.

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Public Records in Texas

Texas public records are governed by the Texas Public Information Act (PIA), which gives residents and the public the right to access government documents and records. From property ownership and court records to business filings and vital statistics, Texas maintains extensive public databases across its 254 counties. Texas has the highest county count in the U.S., and county clerks maintain land records, court filings, and vital statistics — making Texas one of the highest-volume public-records jurisdictions in the country. Whether you're conducting a background check, researching property history, or verifying business information, the resources below provide direct access to official Texas public records.

What you can find
  • Property and real estate records
  • Court records (civil, criminal, and probate)
  • Business filings and corporate registrations
  • Vital records (birth, death, marriage, divorce)
  • UCC liens and secured filings
  • Professional licenses and notary commissions
How to access Texas public records

Most Texas public records can be accessed online through state agency portals like the Texas State Library and Archives Commission and the Texas Vital Statistics Section, or through individual county clerk websites. For records not published online, agencies accept written requests under the Texas Public Information Act — usually by mail or email — and must respond within the statutory deadline. Certified copies of vital records and court documents typically require a small fee and proof of identity.

TX

Texas

Notary Verification
Texas SOS Notary Public Search

Verify Texas notary public commissions via the Secretary of State. Returns commission status, expiration date, county, bonding company, and commission number.

Portal links are verified regularly but government websites change without notice. If this link appears broken, use the button below to visit the state's main website, then navigate to their business search tool. Found a broken link? Suggest a correction →
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What you can find
  • Notary commission status (active/expired/revoked)
  • Commission number and expiration date
  • Notary name and county of commission
  • Commission type (traditional/electronic/remote online)
  • Disciplinary actions or revocations
Pro tip
Always verify the notary's commission expiration date AND commission number before accepting a notarized document. An expired commission makes the notarization invalid regardless of the seal.
Searchadex links directly to the official Texas notary verification portal. We never store, resell, or charge for this information.
Need more than a government portal?

For compiled background reports that go beyond the official record — combining people search, contact data, and multi-source history — these professional tools can help. They are paid services, not government sources.

Disclosure: links to professional tools are affiliate links. Searchadex may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. These are not government sources, and results are not FCRA-compliant for employment, housing, tenant, or credit decisions.