Search Green Lake County Public Records

Green Lake County Public Records are well organized because the register of deeds office offers a deep set of land and vital record tools, plus online services for both occasional and daily users. That makes the county especially useful for property work, family record work, and fraud monitoring. If you know the document type, Green Lake County gives you a way to search, order, and verify without guessing. It is one of the more practical counties for a user who wants both online access and clear office rules.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Green Lake County Public Records Overview

1982 Tapestry Start
$20 Vital Copy
$5 Convenience Fee
920 County Area

Green Lake County Public Records Sources

The Green Lake County Register of Deeds page at greenlakecountywi.gov/departments/register-of-deeds is the main local source for public records work. The office is at 571 County Road A in Green Lake, with phone 920-294-4021 and fax 920-294-4009. Renee Thiem-Korth is the register. The office history matters too: the register office was established in Wisconsin in 1836 and made permanent in the county structure in 1848. That gives the county a long and stable records trail.

This Green Lake County Public Records image comes from the official county website at greenlakecountywi.gov.

Green Lake County Public Records official website

The county home page is helpful because it points to the register office, the real estate page, and the online service pages in one place.

Green Lake County also publishes a direct real estate page and an online services page. That gives the county a clean split between the office and the web tools, which is useful for public records research. If you want the land record lane, the county has it. If you want the certificate lane, the county has that too.

Green Lake County Public Records by Type

Green Lake County has a broad records set. The register office handles deeds, land contracts, mortgages, UCC filings, plats, certified survey maps, lis pendens, annexations, resolutions, and miscellaneous files. It also handles vital records, domestic partnerships, and military discharges. That is a lot of ground for one office, and it makes the county useful for property and family research alike.

The genealogy research page adds more depth. The county says users can search property ownership, deeds, mortgages, plat maps, section maps, surveys, land patents, and birth, death, and marriage records. That is helpful because it lets a user move from a family line to a property line without changing offices. If you are working on history, that kind of overlap is a real advantage.

The county also gives military discharge records a specific rule. DD-214 records are a free service for veterans, are confidential, and cannot be released without written permission from the veteran unless the veteran is deceased and the requester is next of kin. That detail matters because it shows how the county handles public records with a privacy boundary.

This Green Lake County Public Records image comes from the register of deeds page at greenlakecountywi.gov/departments/register-of-deeds.

Green Lake County Public Records register of deeds

Use it when the record is a certificate, deed, or other file held by the county register office.

Green Lake County Public Records Access

Green Lake County access is strong because the county explains how and when records move. The office says recorded documents are indexed the next working day and images are available by noon of the next working day. That gives the public a clear expectation, which is useful when you are waiting on a recording or trying to confirm whether a filing has shown up.

The county also gives good in-person instructions. Mail requests need a self-addressed stamped envelope, fees, and a copy of ID. In-person requests require current ID. That is practical because it tells you what to bring before you leave home. The county's public records process is not vague, and that is a big help when you need a quick copy.

When a request needs a broader Wisconsin frame, the state public records board at publicrecordsboard.wi.gov and the State Law Library records guide at wilawlibrary.gov/topics/records/index.php are the best backups. They help explain the record rule when the county office is clear about the file but the request still needs a legal frame.

Note: Green Lake County is one of the better record-search counties because it gives clear timing, clear fee rules, and clear online access paths.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results