Bee County Property Records

Bee County deed records are on file at the county clerk's office in Beeville. The clerk keeps all real property instruments recorded in the county, including warranty deeds, quitclaim deeds, deeds of trust, liens, and easements. You can search these records in person at the Beeville courthouse or through online tools. Each document filed with the clerk gets stamped, indexed, and added to the official chain of title for that parcel. Anyone can search or request copies of deed records in Bee County.

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Bee County Overview

Beeville County Seat
$3+ Recording Fee (first page)
Mon-Fri Office Hours
Public Record Access

Bee County Clerk Recording Office

The Bee County Clerk handles all deed recordings and real property filings. The office maintains the official grantor-grantee index and stores all recorded instruments. Texas Property Code Section 11.001 requires that conveyances of real property be filed with the county clerk in the county where the land is located. Staff at the Beeville courthouse can help you record a new deed or look up an existing one.

The clerk keeps a direct (grantor-grantee) and indirect (grantee-grantor) index. These let you trace ownership forward and backward through time. You search by the name of the person who gave or received the deed. When you find the entry, it points you to a volume and page number or a digital document number where the full deed is stored.

Office Bee County Clerk
Address 105 W. Corpus Christi, Room 102, Beeville, TX 78102
Phone (361) 362-3245
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Website https://www.beecounty.texas.gov/

Bee County Deed Recording Fees

Texas sets the base recording fee by statute. Under Local Government Code Section 118.011, the fee is $3 for the first page and $2 for each additional page. Documents signed after 1981 must include the grantee's mailing address or face a $25 penalty under Property Code Section 11.003.

Common fees at Bee County include:

  • First page of a deed: $3
  • Each additional page: $2
  • Certified copy of a recorded deed: varies by page count
  • Plain (uncertified) copy: lower cost per page
  • Grantee address omission penalty: $25

Note: Some counties add local fees on top of state minimums. Call the Bee County Clerk at (361) 362-3245 to confirm current rates before you file.

What You Need to Record a Deed in Bee County

Texas has clear rules for what a deed must contain before it can be recorded. Under Property Code Section 5.021, a deed must be in writing and signed by the grantor. It needs a legal description of the property and must name the grantee. It also needs to show intent to convey the land.

Before the clerk will record a deed in Bee County, the document must be acknowledged. This means the grantor signs in front of a notary public or other authorized official. The notary adds a certificate that confirms the signing. Under Property Code Section 11.002, all instruments must be in English unless signed before 1897. Foreign language documents need a certified English translation attached.

Bring the original signed and notarized deed to the clerk's office in Beeville. The clerk will stamp and index it. You get a file-marked copy back with the recording date, volume, and page number noted. Texas is a notice state, so recording the deed protects you as a buyer by putting the world on notice of your ownership claim.

Online Access to Bee County Deed Records

Many Texas counties now offer some online access to deed records. If Bee County has its own online portal, the link will be on the county clerk's page at https://www.beecounty.texas.gov/. Not all counties have full digital records going back to their founding, so older documents may require an in-person visit.

Third-party services also cover Bee County records. TexasFile provides deed records for many Texas counties through a subscription. CourthouseDirect offers title search tools and document images. These paid services are useful for title professionals, attorneys, and real estate investors who need fast remote access.

The Texas General Land Office at glo.texas.gov holds historical land grant records and survey data. For very old deeds from the Republic of Texas era or Spanish land grants, that archive is worth checking. The GLO's records complement what you find at the county level.

Texas Deed Recording Law

Texas is a "notice" state under Property Code Section 13.001. This means a deed is void against creditors and later buyers if they had no notice of it. Recording your deed gives constructive notice to everyone. It does not affect the deed's validity between the original parties - a deed is valid upon signing and delivery even if never recorded.

Under Section 13.002, a properly recorded instrument serves as notice to all persons and is open to public inspection. Under Section 13.003, recording in the wrong county has the same effect as not recording at all. Be sure to file in Bee County if the land sits in Bee County.

The grantor-grantee index at the Bee County Clerk's office is what courts and title companies rely on. A title search runs both the direct index (starting from the seller) and the indirect index (starting from the buyer) to trace a complete chain of title. Missing links in the chain can cause title problems that a title insurance policy helps protect against.

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