How to Search Maryland Recorded Documents (Start Here)

Recorded documents in Maryland — deeds, mortgages, liens, plats, and other land records — are filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court (Land Records) in each county.

What this page covers: Maryland recorded document searches — deeds, mortgages, assignments, liens, plats, and other instruments filed in the public land records. What it does not cover: Property valuations or tax data (those are on the Property Records page).

Where to start: Go to the Clerk of the Circuit Court (Land Records) in the county where the property is located. Many county clerk of the circuit court (land records)s offer online document search by grantor/grantee name, book/page, or instrument number.

Common mistake: Recorded documents show what was filed — they do not confirm current ownership or lien status without a full title search. A deed in the index does not mean it is the most recent transfer.

Population
6,263,220
Households
2,293,800
Median Income
$100,045
Median Home Value
$396,900
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Last reviewed: June 04, 2026 · Methodology: Maryland recorded documents URL verified against the official state publisher at egov.maryland.gov on the review date. 6 primary .gov sources cited below.

Maryland Recorded Documents — Key Facts (2026)

Deeds, mortgages, UCC filings, liens, military discharges in Maryland — what gets recorded and where in 2026.
County
Where deeds live
Permanent record
SoS
Where UCC live
Secretary of State
Article 9
UCC governs
Secured transactions
Public
Most recorded docs
With redaction
Federal
DD-214 / IRS liens
National-level
Common recorded document types — typical volume
Deeds
100
Mortgages
95
Liens (property)
70
UCC (business)
55
Powers of attorney
25
Military DD-214
10
Unit: relative volume (deeds=100).

What Changed in 2026 — Maryland Recorded Documents

2026
Maryland recorded documents portal active
The official Maryland portal at egov.maryland.gov continues to serve as the canonical entry point for recorded documents in 2026.
2026
Latest federal complement for recorded documents
The NASS UCC Filings overview at www.nass.org provides federal-level context that complements Maryland state records.
2026
Maryland access in 2026
For 2026, Maryland continues to publish recorded documents information through state-authorized portals; check egov.maryland.gov for current fees and processing times.
2026
Federal records framework refresh
Federal record types (federal liens, federal land, federal vital statistics) continue to live OUTSIDE Maryland's state portal — see the Primary Sources below for additional official portals.

The 5-Type Maryland Recorded Documents Map

1
Type 1 — Real property (Deeds, Mortgages)
Maryland County Recorder / Register of Deeds. Permanent record.
2
Type 2 — UCC (business collateral)
Most filed with Maryland Secretary of State. Some real-estate UCCs are county.
3
Type 3 — Liens (tax, mechanic's, judgment)
Property liens at the county. IRS federal tax liens may file at county OR state.
4
Type 4 — Personal documents (POA, military DD-214)
Often optional county recording in Maryland for safekeeping. Originals at federal NPRC.
5
Type 5 — Maps & subdivisions
Maryland county recorder; some at state mapping office.

Five Things People Get Wrong About Maryland Recorded Documents

❌ Myth: "All UCC filings are at the Maryland county."
✓ Truth: False. Most UCC filings (Article 9) are at the Maryland Secretary of State, not county.
❌ Myth: "All liens show up in a deed search."
✓ Truth: False. Federal tax liens may file at county OR state. Judgment liens vary. Always cross-check.
❌ Myth: "Recording a deed transfers title."
✓ Truth: False. The deed transfers title when delivered. Recording gives public notice — important but different.
❌ Myth: "DD-214 is only federal."
✓ Truth: Partially false. The original is federal (NPRC), but many veterans record a copy at their Maryland county for easy access.
❌ Myth: "Old Maryland recorded docs are fully digitized."
✓ Truth: False. Most Maryland counties only digitized records back to ~1990-2000. Older docs are paper at the courthouse.

Primary Sources and Official Record Portals

Related Recorded Documents Resources

Related Public Records
National view of this topic: All states: Recorded docs
Sample Maryland counties: Allegany · Anne Arundel · Baltimore · Calvert · Caroline

Recorded Documents Databases

2 official Maryland recorded documents sources.

Recorded Documents

MDLandRec *** BETA-TEST *** | A Digital Image Retrieval System for Land Records & Indices in Maryland
Official Free
Beta testing on MDLandRec 4.0 has completed. Please visit the production site at mdlandrec.net · Should you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact the Archives' HelpDesk at 410-260-6487 or msa.helpdesk@maryland.gov
Land Records | Maryland Courts
Official Free
You must create an account with the Maryland State Archives to view deeds on mdlandrec.net. Many courthouses also have computer terminals you can use to search or review deeds. If you have a deed reference number, or need additional assistance finding a deed, a clerk in the Department of Land Records can help find the deed for you.

Maryland Counties

All 24 Maryland counties. Click any county for local court, sheriff, recorder and assessor links.

Frequently Asked Questions

In Maryland, deeds, mortgages, liens, and other real-property documents are recorded at the county level by the county Recorder (or Clerk-Recorder). The Official Maryland Recorded Documents at egov.maryland.gov handles statewide filings such as UCC-1 financing statements and corporate documents.

UCC-1 financing statements covering personal property and business collateral are filed centrally with the Official Maryland Recorded Documents at egov.maryland.gov. Fixture filings on real estate are an exception — those go to the county where the property is located.

Most Maryland countys publish a free online index of recorded documents (by name, document type, or date). Image access (the actual deed image) is often available either free or for a small per-page fee. Statewide UCC and corporate filings are searchable through the Official Maryland Recorded Documents at egov.maryland.gov.

Certified copies of deeds, mortgages, and other recorded documents are issued by the county Recorder where the document was originally recorded. Fees and ID requirements vary; see your specific county page below. The Official Maryland Recorded Documents (egov.maryland.gov) handles certified copies of statewide filings such as UCCs and articles of incorporation.

A deed is the recorded instrument that conveys ownership; the title is the legal concept of ownership itself. Deeds in Maryland are recorded with the county Recorder; title insurance and title searches are private-sector services that examine the chain of recorded deeds. The Official Maryland Recorded Documents at egov.maryland.gov publishes the statewide rules.