Pike County Public Records

Pike County, Alabama Public Records

Use this guide to start property, tax, and recorded document searches in Pike County, Alabama, with routing to assessor, recording, court, and county administration sources.

First Name
Last Name

State

Alabama

County

Pike County
Jurisdiction
Pike County, Alabama
Primary Land Records Office
Probate Court (County Recording) handles deeds, mortgages, liens, plats, and related filings in Pike County.
Property Data Path
Parcels and valuations are maintained by county Revenue/Tax Assessor; tax billing and payment status tracked by Tax Collector/Revenue.
Certified Copies
Order certified land records from Probate/Recording and court judgments from Circuit Clerk; plain copies may be available for research.

Start Here in Pike County

  • Start with recorded deeds, mortgages, and liens at the county recording office (Probate) by grantor/grantee name, book/page, or date range.
  • Check parcel ownership and assessment with the Revenue/Tax Assessor using parcel number or owner name; confirm situs address and legal description.
  • Use property tax billing lookup with the Tax Collector/Revenue to verify payment status or delinquency before closing or escrow.
  • Search civil and domestic case indexes with the Circuit Court Clerk by party name or case number when checking judgments affecting property.
  • Request county commission meeting minutes, resolutions, or land-use actions from County Administration/Commission by meeting date or board.

Record Routing

  • Recorded land documents → Probate/Recording
  • Parcels and assessments → Revenue/Tax Assessor
  • Property tax billing and payment → Tax Collector/Revenue
  • Civil and domestic court records → Circuit/District Court Clerk
  • Agendas, minutes, and resolutions → County Commission/Administration

Search Inputs

  • Grantor or Grantee Name
  • Parcel Number (Parcel/PPIN)
  • Book and Page
  • Property Address (Situs)
  • Case Number or Party Name
  • Meeting Date or Agenda Keyword

Pike County Source Map

Source / Office Best For Search Method Why It Matters
Probate Court (Recording) Deeds, mortgages, releases, liens, plats, easements, and indexing Grantor/grantee, book/page, subdivision or legal, date range; index may be online or on-site In Pike County, land instruments are recorded with the probate/recording office; chain of title and encumbrances start here.
Revenue/Tax Assessor Parcel ownership, assessed value, legal description, land/use class Parcel number, owner name, address; map or roll lookup where provided Identifies the parcel tied to a deed and supports valuation and description for Pike County properties.
Tax Collector/Revenue Tax bills, payment status, receipts, delinquent listings Parcel number, owner name; year filter Verifies taxes due or paid, often required for transfer or escrow in Pike County.
GIS/Mapping Parcel boundaries, aerials, jurisdiction layers, E-911 addressing Address search, parcel click, map layers Visual confirmation of parcel location, boundary context, and jurisdiction in Pike County.
Circuit Court Clerk Civil judgments, liens, probate appeals, domestic and traffic case dockets Case number, party name, filing date Judgments and certain liens can affect title; docket research complements recording searches in Pike County.
County Commission/Administration Meeting minutes, agendas, resolutions, road vacations, local policies Meeting date, board/committee, topic Official actions may impact roads, rights-of-way, or land use affecting Pike County parcels.

Pike County Record FAQs

Where are deeds recorded in Pike County, Alabama?

Deeds, mortgages, and related instruments are recorded with the county recording office, typically the Probate Court. Search by grantor/grantee or book and page; request certified copies as needed.

How can I find my Pike County parcel number?

Use the assessor or tax records to locate the parcel by owner name or situs address; the parcel ID or PPIN on the tax bill also identifies the parcel.

Which records usually require certified copies?

Title work often requires certified copies of recorded instruments and court judgments; order certifications from the holding office, while plain copies can serve for research.