Find Deed Records in Curry County

Curry County deed records are managed by the County Clerk in Gold Beach, Oregon. The clerk office records all property deeds, land transfers, mortgages, and related documents for Curry County. With a population of about 23,446, Curry County is one of the smaller counties in Oregon. It sits along the southern coast and includes the towns of Gold Beach, Brookings, and Port Orford. If you want to look up who owns a parcel or get a copy of a recorded deed, the Curry County Clerk office is where to begin. You can visit in person or reach out by phone or mail to search deed records.

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Curry County Quick Facts

Gold Beach County Seat
23,446 Population
$76+ Recording Fee
No Tax State Transfer Tax

Curry County Clerk Recording Services

The Curry County Clerk in Gold Beach is the official recorder of all deed documents in the county. When you buy or sell property in Curry County, the deed gets filed at this office. The clerk stamps the document with a recording date and time, gives it a unique number, and adds the information to the public index. This process makes the deed part of the permanent record in Curry County.

Oregon's decentralized system means each of the 36 counties runs its own recording office. Curry County is no different. The clerk here handles deeds, trust deeds, mortgages, liens, plat maps, and other instruments that affect real property titles. Staff can help you understand what documents are on file and how to search the indexes for Curry County deed records.

Because Curry County has a small population, the clerk office may have shorter hours than larger metro-area counties. Call ahead to confirm the schedule before you visit Gold Beach. The staff can also tell you what forms of payment they accept for recording fees and copies.

Curry County GIS Property Map

The Curry County GIS map is an interactive tool for looking up property information. While it does not replace the official deed records at the clerk office, the GIS map helps you identify parcels, find tax lot numbers, and view boundary lines before you search for deed documents.

Curry County GIS map for property deed records in Gold Beach Oregon

Use the GIS map to locate the parcel you are interested in and gather the tax lot number for a more targeted deed search at the Curry County Clerk office.

Knowing the correct tax lot number or legal description speeds up your search at the clerk office. Property in Curry County stretches from the coast inland through rugged mountains and forest land. Some parcels are large and may have complex legal descriptions from timber company sales or federal land transfers. The GIS map helps you sort through these details before you start digging into the deed records.

How to Search Deed Records in Curry County

Searching for deed records in Curry County starts at the clerk office in Gold Beach. The public indexes let you look up deeds by grantor name, grantee name, or document type. Oregon law requires the clerk to keep these indexes under ORS Chapter 205.

For in-person visits, bring as much information as you can. A name, property address, tax lot number, or recording number will all help narrow your search. Once you find the deed in the index, ask the clerk for a copy. Standard copy fees apply. You can get plain copies or certified copies depending on your needs.

If you cannot visit Gold Beach, send a written request by mail. Include the names of the parties, the approximate recording date, and the type of document you want. Enclose payment for the copy fee. The clerk can charge up to $3.75 to locate a record and 25 cents per page for copies. Certified copies cost $3.75 extra for the official certificate.

Note: Curry County is remote and mail delivery can be slow, so allow extra time for requests sent by post.

Curry County Deed Document Standards

All deeds recorded in Curry County must meet Oregon's statewide format requirements. These standards ensure that documents stay readable and can be stored properly for decades. The rules are found in ORS 205.232 and related statutes.

The paper must be no larger than 14 by 8.5 inches and weigh at least 20 pounds. Text must be printed in 10-point type or larger. The first page needs the names of all parties, a statement of the true consideration paid, an address for document return, and tax statement information. A blank space in the upper right corner of the first page is reserved for the Curry County Clerk to stamp the recording label.

Documents that do not meet these standards can still be recorded, but the clerk will charge an extra $20 on top of normal fees. The typical recording cost for a single-page deed in Curry County runs between $76 and $87. This total includes the base $5 per page fee, plus the Oregon Land Information System fee, Assessment and Taxation Fund fee, and Housing Alliance Tax. Oregon has no state transfer tax, so these recording fees are the only government cost when you file a deed in Curry County.

Oregon Law and Curry County Deed Records

Several Oregon statutes shape how deed records work in Curry County. The most important are ORS Chapter 205 for recording duties, ORS Chapter 93 for conveyancing, and ORS Chapter 192 for public records access.

Under the race-notice rule in ORS 93.640, recording your deed in Curry County is essential. An unrecorded deed is void against a later buyer who records first and did not know about the prior sale. This gives teeth to the recording system. It means you should never leave a deed unrecorded after a closing. File it with the Curry County Clerk right away to protect your ownership rights.

Oregon's Public Records Law makes all deed records in Curry County open to the public. Anyone can inspect or copy them. The Oregon DOJ publishes guidance on exercising your right to access public records. The Oregon State Archives holds historical land records that may include early Curry County deed documents from the territorial and homestead eras.

Property Types in Curry County

Curry County has a diverse mix of property. Coastal homes and vacation rentals are common in Gold Beach and Brookings. Inland, large timber tracts dominate the landscape. Some parcels carry federal land patents or historical timber company deeds that create complex title chains.

Each of these property types creates different deed records. Residential sales usually involve simple warranty deeds. Timber land often transfers through bargain and sale deeds or corporate transactions. Quitclaim deeds are common for boundary adjustments or transfers between family members. All of these get filed with the Curry County Clerk and become part of the public record.

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Nearby Counties

Curry County borders Coos County to the north, Josephine County to the east, and the California state line to the south. The Pacific Ocean forms the western boundary. If you are searching for deed records on a property near a county line, verify which county holds the records before you begin. Each of Oregon's 36 counties keeps its own separate set of deed records.