Quick Answer: Public records in the United States are organized by jurisdiction and maintained by the government agency responsible for creating the record. Federal records are held by federal agencies and courts. State and local records are maintained by state departments, county offices, and municipal agencies. Because records are distributed across thousands of separate systems, effective research requires identifying which jurisdiction created the record and searching the appropriate government portal directly.
Public records are government documents maintained by the agency that created them — courts, county offices, state departments, and federal agencies — each holding the records that document their own official actions. They exist because transparency laws require government agencies to document their activities and make most of those records accessible to the public. For investigators, journalists, landlords, researchers, and due-diligence professionals, understanding how these records are organized is the difference between finding what you need and concluding — incorrectly — that no record exists.
⚠️ Legal Notice: Public record access is governed by federal and state transparency laws that vary significantly by jurisdiction and record type. This guide explains lawful public-records access only and does not constitute legal advice.
Why This Guide Is Reliable
inet-investigation.com publishes research-based guides built on primary government sources, investigative practice, and public records law. All sources cited link to official government websites or primary legal references. For jurisdiction-specific legal questions, consult a licensed attorney or the relevant government agency.
The Core Problem: Why Most Public Records Searches Fail
The most common mistake in public records research is assuming that records exist in a single searchable national database. They don’t — and that assumption causes more failed searches than any other error.
The United States uses a federal system of government in which authority is divided between federal, state, and local governments. Each government entity documents its own official actions and maintains the resulting records in its own repository. A property deed is held by the county recorder where the property is located. A federal criminal case is held by the U.S. District Court that heard it. A business registration is held by the Secretary of State in the state where the entity was formed. None of these agencies share a common database.
This means a researcher who searches one system and finds nothing may have simply searched the wrong jurisdiction. The record may exist — in a different county, a different state court system, or a federal database that was never consulted. Identifying the correct government authority before searching is the foundational skill in public records research.
→ Related guide: What Are Public Records?
The Legal Framework That Makes Records Public
Public access to government records is governed by a combination of federal and state transparency laws. Understanding which law governs which records determines how to request them and what restrictions apply.
| Law | What It Covers | Relevance to Public Records |
|---|---|---|
| Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) | Public access to records held by federal executive branch agencies | Allows any person to request records from federal agencies |
| Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) | Regulates consumer reporting agencies and background check services | Controls how public records can be used in employment and credit screening |
| Driver’s Privacy Protection Act (DPPA) | Restricts disclosure of motor vehicle and driver records | Limits who can access driver history and vehicle registration data |
| HIPAA | Protects individually identifiable health information | Restricts medical records regardless of whether they pass through a government system |
Source: Freedom of Information Act — 5 U.S.C. § 552 — Cornell LII Source: Fair Credit Reporting Act — 15 U.S.C. § 1681 — Cornell LII Source: Driver’s Privacy Protection Act — 18 U.S.C. § 2721 — Cornell LII
FOIA governs records held by federal executive branch agencies — the EPA, DOJ, IRS, FBI, and others. It does not apply to federal courts, Congress, the White House, or any state or local government. Federal courts operate under their own access rules, and state and local records are governed by each state’s open records law — variously called sunshine laws, public information acts, or open records acts.
This distinction matters practically: to request a federal agency document, you file a FOIA request. To access a federal court record, you use PACER. To access a state court record, you search that state’s court portal. These are three separate systems with three separate access processes.
Federal vs. State Public Records: Two Separate Systems
Public records operate within two major administrative frameworks that function independently of each other.
| Government Level | Typical Record Types | Primary Custodians |
|---|---|---|
| Federal | Federal court cases, federal criminal prosecutions, federal agency records, bankruptcy filings | U.S. District Courts, U.S. Courts of Appeals, U.S. Bankruptcy Courts, federal agencies |
| State | Business registrations, professional licenses, state court cases, vital records | Secretary of State, state courts, state vital records offices |
| County | Property deeds, tax assessments, probate filings, lien records | County recorder, county assessor, county clerk |
| Municipal | Police reports, building permits, zoning decisions, code enforcement | City departments and municipal agencies |
Federal records document actions taken by federal courts and agencies. These are searchable through PACER for court records and through individual agency FOIA portals for administrative records. State and local records document everything else — the vast majority of court cases, property transactions, business activities, and government decisions that affect daily life.
Because these systems operate independently, a complete investigation typically requires searching both federal and state systems, often across multiple states and counties.
→ Related guide: What Is PACER? A Beginner’s Guide to Federal Court Records
→ Related guide: How to Search State Court Records Online
How Jurisdiction Determines Where Records Are Held
Jurisdiction — the geographic and legal authority of a government body — determines which agency created a record and where it is stored. Records are held by the agency responsible for the action that produced them, in the jurisdiction where that action occurred.
A federal criminal prosecution is held by the U.S. District Court for the district where the case was filed — not in a national criminal database accessible to the public. A property deed is recorded with the county recorder in the county where the property sits — not searchable in any statewide or national real estate database. A business registration is filed with the Secretary of State in the state where the entity was formed — not visible in any other state’s system.
For investigators, this means the research question isn’t just “does a record exist?” It’s “which government body would have created this record, and where does that body store its records?” Answering that question correctly before searching eliminates the most common cause of failed searches.
Major Categories of Public Records and Where to Find Them
Public records exist across several categories of government activity. Each category is maintained by a different type of agency at a different level of government.
Court Records
Court records document legal proceedings — criminal prosecutions, civil lawsuits, evictions, bankruptcy filings, divorce proceedings, and probate matters. They are maintained by the clerk of the court that handled the case. Federal court records are accessible through PACER (pacer.gov). State court records must be searched through each state’s court portal or county clerk system, as there is no national database for state court cases.
For investigators, court records are often the most information-rich public record source available. A single bankruptcy filing can contain a complete asset inventory, creditor list, and income disclosure. A civil lawsuit complaint can document fraud allegations, business relationships, and financial disputes in detail that appears nowhere else in any public record.
→ Related guide: How to Locate Court Records for Any Person in the U.S.
Property Records
Property records document real estate ownership, transfers, mortgages, and liens. They are maintained by county recorders (sometimes called registers of deeds) and county assessors, and indexed by parcel number, owner name, or address. Most county property records are now searchable online through county portal websites at no cost.
For investigators, property records reveal current and historical ownership, financing arrangements, legal claims against the property, and the financial relationships between parties. A lien search against a property can reveal unpaid judgments, contractor disputes, and tax delinquencies that don’t appear in any background check database.
→ Related guide: What Is a Lien Record?
Business and Licensing Records
Business registration records document the formation and legal status of corporations, LLCs, and partnerships. These filings are maintained by the Secretary of State in the state where the entity was formed and are generally free to search through official state portals. Professional licenses — for contractors, attorneys, physicians, real estate agents, and others — are maintained by state licensing boards.
Business records are particularly valuable for asset investigations and due diligence. Secretary of State filings reveal who formed an entity, who the officers and registered agents are, when the entity was formed, and whether it remains in good standing.
Criminal Records
Criminal records document arrests, charges, and the outcomes of criminal proceedings. These records exist at multiple levels — municipal, county, state, and federal — and there is no public national criminal records database. State court portals are the primary source for state criminal cases. PACER covers federal criminal prosecutions. For sex offender registry searches, the National Sex Offender Public Website (nsopw.gov) searches across all participating state registries simultaneously.
→ Related guide: How to Look Up Criminal Records Online
Vital Records
Vital records document major life events: births, deaths, marriages, and divorces. They are maintained by state vital records offices and, in some cases, county clerks. Access rules vary significantly by state and record type. Death records and older historical records are generally public. Recent birth records are typically restricted to protect minors and prevent identity theft. Most states now offer online ordering for certified copies of death certificates and marriage records.
Government Administrative Records
Administrative records document how government agencies make decisions and spend public money — meeting minutes, government contracts, zoning decisions, building permits, regulatory filings, and agency correspondence. These records form the core of what FOIA and state open records laws were designed to make accessible. For journalists and investigators, administrative records often reveal how and why government decisions were made, and who benefited from them.
Where Public Records Are Actually Held: A Reference Table
| Record Type | Primary Agency | Typical Access Method |
|---|---|---|
| Federal court cases | U.S. District Court clerk | PACER (pacer.gov) |
| Federal bankruptcy | U.S. Bankruptcy Court clerk | PACER (pacer.gov) |
| State court cases | State or county court clerk | State court portal |
| Property deeds | County recorder or register of deeds | County portal |
| Property tax records | County assessor | County portal |
| Business filings | Secretary of State | State SoS portal |
| Professional licenses | State licensing board | State licensing portal |
| Criminal records | Courts and law enforcement | State court portals, PACER |
| Vital records | State vital records office | State vital records portal |
| Federal agency records | Originating federal agency | FOIA request |
| Sex offender registry | State registries | nsopw.gov |
Online availability varies widely. Some courts provide near-real-time electronic access. Others maintain records primarily in physical archives that require in-person or mail requests. Always verify whether a portal exists before concluding that records are unavailable.
→ Related guide: Best Public Records Databases for Investigations
What Isn’t Public: Exemptions and Restrictions
Not everything a government agency holds is a public record. Transparency laws include specific exemptions designed to protect privacy, security, and the integrity of ongoing investigations.
| Record Type | Reason for Restriction |
|---|---|
| Social Security numbers | Redacted to prevent identity theft |
| Medical records | Protected under HIPAA |
| Juvenile court records | Sealed in most states to protect minors |
| Sealed or expunged court records | Court-ordered confidentiality |
| Active law enforcement investigations | Protection of investigative integrity |
| National security materials | Classified under federal law |
| Adoption records | Restricted in most states |
Source: FOIA Exemptions — 5 U.S.C. § 552(b) — Cornell LII
Sealed and expunged records are particularly important for researchers to understand. A sealed case still exists within the court system — it has simply been removed from public access by court order. An expunged record has been legally destroyed or removed from the record. Neither will appear in a public search, which means finding no record is not the same as confirming a clean history.
How to Identify the Correct Public Record System: Step-by-Step
Step 1 — Identify the type of record needed. Determine whether you need court records, property records, business filings, criminal records, vital records, or administrative documents. Each type has a different custodian and a different access process.
Step 2 — Determine the jurisdiction where the event occurred. Records are tied to the geographic location where the action took place. Identify the state, county, or city where the event occurred — not where the subject currently lives.
Step 3 — Locate the responsible agency’s portal. For federal court records: pacer.gov. For state court records: the relevant state court portal (search “[state name] court records public search”). For property records: the county recorder or assessor portal. For business registrations: the Secretary of State portal for the state of formation.
Step 4 — Search the official government portal first. Government portals are the authoritative source. They are more current and more complete than any commercial aggregator. Always search the primary source before turning to supplementary tools.
Step 5 — Use commercial aggregators to identify jurisdictions, not as primary sources. If you’re unsure which jurisdictions to search, commercial tools can help identify address history and associated counties. Use that information to direct your primary source searches — not as the final answer.
Step 6 — Document what was searched. Record which systems were searched, on which dates, and what was found. Absence of a record is meaningful only if you can document which systems were checked.
Free vs. Paid Tools for Public Records Research
Government portals are the primary and authoritative source for all public records. Commercial databases aggregate records from multiple jurisdictions and can help identify where to search, but they do not replace official repositories.
| Tool | Price | Best Use | FCRA Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| PACER (pacer.gov) | $0.10/page ($30 quarterly waiver) | Federal court and bankruptcy records | N/A — official source |
| State court portals | Free | State criminal and civil records | N/A — official source |
| County recorder portals | Free | Property records, deeds, liens | N/A — official source |
| BeenVerified | ~$26/month | Multi-state aggregated searches | Not FCRA compliant |
| TruthFinder | ~$28/month | Consumer background reports | Not FCRA compliant |
| Spokeo | ~$14/month | Address and contact aggregation | Not FCRA compliant |
| Intelius | $7–$20/report | Individual one-off lookups | Not FCRA compliant |
Professional investigative platforms — LexisNexis Accurint, CLEAR, TLO, IRB Search, Tracers — provide deeper multi-jurisdictional access but require professional credentials and subscription agreements.
Consumer tools are designed for personal informational research only. Employment screening, housing decisions, and credit determinations require FCRA-compliant background check services with written consent, proper disclosures, and adverse-action procedures.
Common Mistakes That Produce Incomplete Results
Assuming records are centralized. The single most common error in public records research is treating any one database — commercial or government — as comprehensive. No such database exists. A search of BeenVerified, PACER, or any single state court portal covers only a fraction of the jurisdictions where a record might exist. Researchers who stop after one search often conclude no record exists when they have simply searched the wrong place.
Searching the wrong jurisdiction. Public records are tied to where events occurred, not where the subject currently lives. A property deed recorded in Maricopa County, Arizona will not appear in a search of Cook County, Illinois records. A federal criminal case filed in the Southern District of New York will not appear in a California state court search. Identifying the correct jurisdiction before searching is more important than choosing the right search tool.
Relying on commercial aggregators as primary sources. Commercial databases compile information from public records but introduce their own lag times, coverage gaps, and data quality issues. A commercial tool may show a record that has since been expunged, miss a recent filing, or omit entire jurisdictions. Government portals are always more current and more authoritative. Use commercial tools to identify jurisdictions to search, then verify findings through official sources.
Treating absence of a result as confirmation of a clean record. A search that returns no results means one of several things: the record doesn’t exist, the record is sealed or expunged, the record is in a jurisdiction that wasn’t searched, the record predates digital availability, or the search used the wrong name variation. Never treat a clean search result as definitive without documenting exactly which systems were searched.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a single national database for all public records? No. Public records are maintained by the agency that created them, which means they are distributed across thousands of federal, state, and local government systems. This decentralized structure requires researchers to identify the correct jurisdiction and search the appropriate government repository for each record type.
Are public records free to access? Many are. Most state court portals, county property assessor and recorder websites, Secretary of State business registries, and sex offender registries are free to search. PACER charges $0.10 per page for federal court records, with a quarterly fee waiver for users who accrue $30 or less. Some agencies charge small fees for certified copies or formal records requests.
Who can access public records? Most public records are accessible to any member of the public without requiring credentials, legal authority, or a stated reason. Some jurisdictions restrict certain record types to parties with a demonstrated interest, and formal FOIA requests are open to any person. Professional investigative databases require credentialed access.
Are background check websites the same as official public records? No. Background check services compile and republish information from public records sources but do not maintain those records themselves. Government agencies are the authoritative custodians. Commercial databases may be incomplete, outdated, or missing entire jurisdictions. For authoritative records, always verify against the originating government source.
Why might a search return no results when a record exists? Several reasons: the record may be sealed or expunged, the correct jurisdiction may not have been searched, records may predate digital availability, the search may have used an incorrect name variation, or the agency may not yet have digitized older records. Always document which systems were searched before concluding no record exists.
What is the difference between public records and public information? Public records are official documents created and maintained by government agencies under legal record-keeping requirements. Public information is a broader category that includes any publicly available data — news articles, social media posts, published reports — regardless of whether a government agency created it. Public records carry more evidentiary weight because they document official actions that must be accurately recorded to have legal effect.
Final Thoughts
Public records in the United States are organized according to jurisdiction and agency responsibility. Courts, government departments, and local offices maintain the records documenting their own official actions — and no centralized system connects them all.
Successful public records research starts with one question: which government body created this record, and where does that body store it? Once that question is answered correctly, the path to the record becomes clear. The guides below cover specific record types, search workflows, and the investigative techniques that experienced researchers use to navigate this fragmented but information-rich system.
Related Guides
- What Are Public Records?
- What Makes a Record “Public”?
- How to Locate Court Records for Any Person in the U.S.
- What Is PACER? A Beginner’s Guide to Federal Court Records
- Best Public Records Databases for Investigations
- How to Look Up Criminal Records Online
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws and access rules vary by jurisdiction. Consult a licensed attorney for guidance specific to your situation. This article may contain affiliate links — we may earn a commission if you purchase through them, at no extra cost to you.
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