NC official databases

North Carolina Public Records Search

DirtSearch tracks 14 free, official North Carolina public-records databases — covering 1 court tools, 3 criminal and public-safety registries, 9 property and business resources, and 1 vital-records portals. Every link below points directly to an official NC state, county, or municipal source.

What you can search in North Carolina

Courts & Legal

Civil, criminal, probate, family, and traffic case dockets across North Carolina courts.

Criminal & Safety

Sex-offender registries, inmate locators, most-wanted lists, warrants, and missing persons.

Property & Business

Assessor records, deeds, tax rolls, parcel maps, business filings, UCC, and unclaimed property.

Vital Records

Birth, death, marriage, and divorce records sourced from North Carolina agencies.

Courts & Legal (1)

Criminal & Public Safety (3)

Property & Business (9)

Vital Records (1)

How to search North Carolina public records

  1. Pick the record category that matches what you need (court, criminal, property, vital, or licensing).
  2. Click through to the official NC portal listed above — DirtSearch never inserts a paywall.
  3. Search by name, case number, parcel number, or business name on the government site itself.
  4. Cross-check the result against a second source (a federal database, a different county portal, or a court docket) before acting on it.

Frequently asked questions about North Carolina public records

Are North Carolina public records really free?

Yes. North Carolina state and county agencies publish most public records online at no charge. Some certified copies (for example, certified marriage or death certificates) carry a fee charged by the issuing agency, but searching the index is free.

Can I run a background check using these NC resources?

You can pull most of the underlying records yourself for free, but if you intend to use the result for an employment, housing, or credit decision the FCRA generally requires a licensed Consumer Reporting Agency. Use the official sources above for personal research and verification.

How current is the data?

Each portal sets its own update cadence. Court dockets are typically updated daily; assessor and deed indexes weekly to monthly; vital-records indexes can lag by several weeks. Check the “last updated” notice on each agency’s site before relying on a result.

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