U.S. Territories — Public Records

U.S. territories each maintain their own records systems under federal and local law. Below are links to official government sources in each jurisdiction.

About U.S. Territories

The United States has five permanently inhabited territories and one federal district: Puerto Rico, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, and the District of Columbia. Each maintains its own court, vital-records, and property-recording system — in some cases under state-equivalent local law, in other cases under unique arrangements.

This page links to the most commonly-requested records in each jurisdiction. For Washington, D.C., see our DC page.

Puerto Rico

Population ~3.2 million. Spanish and English legal system; civil-law inheritance from Spanish code.

Guam

Unincorporated territory with a Department of Revenue & Taxation; mixed civil / common-law system.

U.S. Virgin Islands

Three main islands (St. Thomas, St. Croix, St. John). District court is federal; Superior Court is local.

Northern Mariana Islands

Commonwealth; unique legal status as a CNMI under covenant with the U.S.

American Samoa

Unincorporated unorganized territory; unique land-tenure rules (communal Samoan land).

Last updated: 2026-04-17 · SearchSystems.net — The first free public records directory, est. 1997.