Arlington Property Records

Arlington deed records are on file at the Tarrant County Clerk's office. In Texas, deed recording happens at the county level. If you own property in Arlington, all your deed documents go to the Tarrant County Courthouse, not a city office. The clerk there runs the grantor-grantee index and stores every recorded deed, mortgage, lien, and easement for land in Tarrant County. You can search those records in person at the courthouse or use online tools to find what you need. Certified copies are available on request.

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Arlington Deed Records Overview

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Where Arlington Deed Records Are Filed

If your property is in Arlington, you file at the Tarrant County Clerk's office. That office is the official custodian for all deed records in Tarrant County. Texas Property Code Section 11.001 says that conveyances must be filed with the county clerk in the county where the land sits. There is no city-level deed recording system in Texas.

The Tarrant County Clerk keeps the grantor-grantee and grantee-grantor indexes. These are the tools title companies and attorneys use to trace chain of title. When you record a deed in Arlington, it goes into these indexes and becomes part of the permanent public record for Tarrant County.

Recording Office Tarrant County Clerk
Address 100 W. Weatherford Street, Fort Worth, TX 76196
Phone (817) 884-1195
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Website https://www.tarrantcounty.com/

Recording a Deed in Arlington

To record a deed for property in Arlington, take the signed and notarized document to the Tarrant County Clerk's office. The document must meet Texas recording standards. It needs a legal description of the property, the names of both parties, and a proper acknowledgment. Under Property Code Section 11.008, the clerk can refuse documents that do not meet formatting requirements.

The fee is $3 for the first page and $2 for each page after that under Local Government Code Section 118.011. Documents signed after 1981 that do not include the grantee's mailing address face a $25 penalty. Pay by check or cash at the clerk's office. The clerk will stamp the document with the date, time, and recording number. That information proves when the deed was filed in the public record.

eRecording is available in many Texas counties, letting you submit deeds electronically through approved vendors. If Tarrant County offers eRecording, you can file from your office or home without a courthouse trip. Ask the clerk's office or check their website to see if this option is available for Arlington property filings.

Online Resources for Arlington Property Records

Several online tools can help you find deed records for Arlington properties. The Tarrant County Appraisal District maintains a searchable database of property ownership, values, and parcel data. This is free to use and a good starting point for identifying the current owner and legal description of any parcel in Arlington.

TexasFile is a commercial service that covers many Texas counties and provides deed record searches with document images. CourthouseDirect offers similar access for title professionals. These tools are useful when you need to do a full title search or find older recorded documents without visiting the courthouse in person.

The Texas General Land Office at glo.texas.gov holds historical land grant records. For very old deeds from the Republic of Texas era, start there. The Texas Statutes website has the full text of the Property Code, which governs how deeds are executed and recorded throughout Texas including in Arlington.

Texas Deed Recording Law and Arlington

Texas is a notice state under Property Code Section 13.001. A deed is valid between the parties who sign it even if it is never recorded. But recording protects the buyer against later claims. If you buy property in Arlington and do not record your deed, a later buyer who pays value and has no actual notice of your ownership could take priority over you.

Recording your deed at the Tarrant County Clerk's office gives the world constructive notice of your ownership. Under Section 13.002, a recorded instrument is subject to public inspection and serves as notice to all persons. That is why recording right after closing is so important. Title insurance protects against defects in the chain of title, but it does not replace the need to record your deed promptly.

Note: If land in Arlington spans a county line, you need to record in both counties. Under Section 13.003, recording in the wrong county has the same effect as not recording at all. Check the legal description of any parcel carefully before filing to make sure you record in the right county.

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