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

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Public Records in Florida

Florida public records are governed by the Florida Sunshine Law, 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, Florida maintains extensive public databases across its 67 counties. Florida has some of the most permissive public-records laws in the country — court dockets, property records, and even email correspondence are typically available online without a formal request. Whether you're conducting a background check, researching property history, or verifying business information, the resources below provide direct access to official Florida 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 Florida public records

Most Florida public records can be accessed online through state agency portals like the Florida Department of State Division of Library and Information Services and the Florida Department of Health Bureau of Vital Statistics, or through individual county clerk websites. For records not published online, agencies accept written requests under the Florida Sunshine Law — 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.

FL

Florida

UCC Lien Search
Florida UCC Search

Search Florida UCC-1 filings via the dedicated FloridaUCC portal. Returns debtor and secured party information, collateral, and filing history.

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 →
Open official portal
What you can find
  • Debtor name and address
  • Secured party name and address
  • Filing and lapse dates
  • Collateral description
  • Amendment and termination records
Pro tip
Always search both the debtor's legal name AND any trade names or DBAs. Lenders file under the exact legal entity name — a single spelling difference means you could miss an active lien entirely.
Searchadex links directly to the official Florida UCC filing portal. We never store, resell, or charge for this information.
Registered Agent & Compliance

Need a registered agent in Florida?

If the entity you found needs a registered agent, annual report filing, or compliance support, Harbor Compliance handles all 50 states.

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