Wyoming
Wyoming Property Records: How to Find Out Who Owns a Property (2026)

Wyoming's 23 counties record deeds through the County Clerk, who also serves by statute as the county's Ex-Officio Register of Deeds. There is no statewide deed-search system, and certified-copy fees vary widely from one county to the next.
Information last verified on 2026-07-16. This article has not yet been reviewed by a licensed lawyer.
This guide covers how to search property records by state specifically for Wyoming, including where deeds are actually filed, how to find an owner for free, and what a certified copy costs.
How Property Records Work in Wyoming
Wyoming has no separate Recorder of Deeds office in the way some states do. Instead, the elected County Clerk in each of the state's 23 counties also serves, by statute, as the county's Ex-Officio Register of Deeds, and in some county materials the same office is referred to simply as the County Recorder. Uinta County's own site describes its office as "County Clerk and Ex-Officio Register of Deeds," and Platte County's recording duties likewise sit with its Clerk's Office. Whatever the public-facing title used in a given county, it is always the same elected Clerk's office performing the recording function.
There is no statewide system for searching actual recorded deeds. Each County Clerk runs its own online or in-person system independently, and terms vary widely. Natrona County's online records search, for instance, uses a platform called iDoc Market for a free name-based search of land records back to June 1994, plus a separate service, ArcaSearch, for pre-1994 records, though document images require a paid subscription. Laramie County's system, by contrast, charges a fee for broader access to its land-records website, not just for images.
What Wyoming does have statewide is a parcel and tax-district GIS layer run by the Wyoming Department of Revenue's Property Tax Division, the Wyoming Statewide Parcel and Tax District Viewer, which aggregates ownership-parcel and tax-district mapping data across all 23 counties. That tool is explicitly a tax and boundary map, not a deed or document search; for the underlying recorded instrument, you still need the specific County Clerk.
How to Find Out Who Owns a Property in Wyoming
Start with the Wyoming Statewide Parcel and Tax District Viewer for a quick, free, map-based ownership and boundary check across all 23 counties, useful when you know a general location but not the exact address. County-level tools can add more detail; Natrona County's Property Information and GIS pages are a representative example of the kind of parcel search many counties offer alongside the statewide layer.

To search the actual recorded-document index, go to the County Clerk in the county where the property is located. Some counties, like Natrona County, offer a free name-based search of the recorder's index with document images available only through a paid subscription; others, like Laramie County, charge more broadly for online access. If a county's online system does not answer your question, call the County Clerk's office directly.
Certified-copy fees vary significantly by county, and there is no single statewide fee schedule. Real examples found directly from county fee schedules: Goshen County charges $5.00 for a certified copy, Sheridan County charges $5.00 per document for certification plus $1.00 per page, and Albany County charges just $0.25 per page for plain, non-certified in-person copies. Fremont County's own fee schedule lists $30.00 for a certified copy, notably higher than these other examples. Treat that figure as specific to Fremont County rather than the Wyoming norm, and confirm the current amount directly with whichever County Clerk you are dealing with before you request a copy, since fees can also change without statewide notice.
Wyoming's County Clerks Wear Many Hats
Wyoming is the least populous state in the country, and that shows directly in how its recording function is organized. County Clerk offices are small, multi-purpose operations: the same office issues marriage licenses and vehicle titles, serves as Chief Election Officer for the county, acts as clerk to the county commissioners, and also functions as the Ex-Officio Register of Deeds. Recording land records is one responsibility layered onto several others rather than a single dedicated specialty.
The practical result is a genuine patchwork of online access. Larger counties like Natrona offer a free index search with paid document images; others, like Laramie, charge more broadly for access; and several smaller, more rural counties may have little to no online system at all, requiring an in-person visit or a mailed request. This structure is similar to how West Virginia organizes its own County Clerk's recording duties. When in doubt, call the specific County Clerk before assuming a free online option exists.
Deed Scam Mailers and Property Fraud Alerts
Wyoming homeowners, like homeowners nationwide, are targeted by mailers designed to look like official government notices, offering to sell a "certified copy of your deed" or a "property assessment profile" for a price far above what a County Clerk actually charges. These solicitations often use words like "official" or "certified," pull real details about the property from public records to look legitimate, and set a false response deadline while burying a disclaimer that it is not a government bill. An actual certified copy from a Wyoming County Clerk typically costs a few dollars, commonly in the $5.00 range plus a modest per-page charge, not the far higher amount these mailers typically request. There is no obligation to pay, and a recipient can report it to the Wyoming Attorney General's consumer protection unit or the FTC at ftc.gov/complaint.
A more serious risk is deed fraud, where someone files a forged deed, often a fraudulent quitclaim deed, to transfer or borrow against a property they do not own. The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center issued a public service announcement in June 2026 warning that criminals use identity data pulled from public records and data brokers to impersonate real property owners, targeting vacant land, rental property, and homes without a mortgage. Wyoming has genuine, named defenses at the county level: the Laramie County Clerk launched a free Document Alert email-notification service, confirmed by a county press release, that flags new recordings and corrections matching a subscriber's name for deeds, mortgages, liens, trusts, and powers of attorney. Campbell County offers an equivalent free Document Alert Service. Coverage in Wyoming's smaller counties was not confirmed and likely varies, so ask your specific County Clerk whether an alert enrollment is available.
Not a Substitute for a Title Search
A free county or statewide GIS search is a genuinely useful tool for confirming an owner's name, researching a neighboring parcel, or checking whether a document has been recorded against your name, but it is not the same thing as a professional title search. A licensed title company or closing attorney searches deeds, mortgages, liens, judgments, and court records together and evaluates them for risk, a materially more thorough process than a self-directed public lookup, and roughly a quarter of residential transactions nationally turn up a title issue that this kind of search catches before closing. If you are buying property in Wyoming, engage a licensed title company or real estate attorney rather than relying on a do-it-yourself records check to clear title.

Disclaimer
This article provides general information about how to locate publicly available property records in Wyoming. It is not legal advice, and it is not a substitute for a licensed title company's title search or title insurance before a real estate purchase. County offices, fees, and online tools change without notice; verify current details with the County Clerk in the county where the property is located. Consult a licensed Wyoming attorney for advice about your specific situation.

Last updated: 2026-07-16. Figures and program details reflect their in-force version as of 2026-07-16.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where are property records recorded in Wyoming?
Through the County Clerk, who is statutorily also the county's Ex-Officio Register of Deeds, in the county where the property is located. Some county materials call this same office the County Recorder.
Is there a free statewide property search for Wyoming?
Yes, for parcel boundaries and tax data. The Wyoming Department of Revenue's Statewide Parcel and Tax District Viewer covers all 23 counties for free, but it is a mapping and assessment tool, not a search of actual recorded deed documents.
Can I search Wyoming deeds online?
It depends on the county. Some counties, like Natrona County, offer a free name-based index search with paid document images, while others, like Laramie County, charge more broadly for online access. There is no statewide deed-search system.
What does it cost to get a certified copy of a deed in Wyoming?
It varies significantly by county. Examples include $5.00 flat in Goshen and Sheridan counties. Fremont County's fee schedule lists $30.00, an outlier compared to neighboring counties, so confirm the current fee directly with the specific County Clerk rather than relying on any single statewide figure.
Why do some sources list a $30 certified-copy fee for Wyoming?
That figure comes from Fremont County's own fee schedule and is notably higher than other Wyoming counties, such as Goshen and Sheridan, which charge around $5.00. It reflects that county's schedule specifically, not a statewide Wyoming norm.
How do I find out who owns a property in Wyoming for free?
Start with the Wyoming Statewide Parcel and Tax District Viewer, searchable by location across all 23 counties, or a county-level tool such as Natrona County's Property Information page.
Does Wyoming have a property fraud alert program?
Yes, in at least Laramie and Campbell counties, both offering a free Document Alert service that notifies subscribers when a document is recorded in their name. Coverage in other, smaller counties is unconfirmed.
Sources and References
- Uinta County, Wyoming, County Clerk and Ex-Officio Register of Deeds(uintacountywy.gov).gov
- Platte County, Wyoming, Clerk's Office, Recording Information(plattecountywyoming.com).gov
- Natrona County, Wyoming, Search Records Online(natronacounty-wy.gov).gov
- Natrona County, Wyoming, Property Information(natronacounty-wy.gov).gov
- Wyoming Department of Revenue, Statewide Parcel and Tax District Viewer(arcgis.com).gov
- Laramie County, Wyoming, Clerk's Office launches free service to help prevent property fraud (press release)(laramiecountywy.gov).gov
- Campbell County, Wyoming, Document Alert Service(campbellcountywy.gov).gov
- Goshen County, Wyoming, Clerk's Fees(goshencounty.org).gov
- Albany County, Wyoming, Real Estate recording information(albanycountywy.gov).gov
- FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center, Public Service Announcement I-061626-PSA, "Protect Your Property from Illegal Sales Through Parcel Owner Impersonation" (June 16, 2026)(ic3.gov).gov