Find Price County Property Records

Price County Property Records are built around the Register of Deeds office, two long-running grantor and grantee indexes, and a GIS page that helps place land on the map. That makes the county useful when you are trying to reach an older deed, a recorded sale, or a parcel clue that starts with a name instead of an address. The office also keeps births, deaths, and marriages, so the record set is broader than a simple land index. If your search begins with an old owner, a limited date range, or a property detail from paper, Price County gives you a clear way in.

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Price County Property Records Office

The Register of Deeds office is in the Price County Courthouse, Room 108, at 126 Cherry St. in Phillips. That office is the county anchor for Price County Property Records because it keeps the land record trail and the vital record trail in one place. It also tells users that the office cannot change deeds or draft deeds, which is a useful boundary to know before a request starts. If a deed needs to be altered, the office says an attorney must be contacted.

That office note keeps the search honest. It means the Register of Deeds can help with records, ordering, and indexing, but not with legal drafting. Price County Property Records are therefore best handled as a search and retrieval task first. If the file is older, the office can point you to the grantor and grantee indexes. If the file is newer, the online ordering tool can help you move from a known entry to the real estate document itself.

The GIS page at co.price.wi.us/255/Price-County-GIS adds a parcel layer, and the Beacon platform at beacon.schneidercorp.com/Application.aspx?AppID=1196 is the county's map-side search tool. That makes the office work more efficient because you can check the parcel on the map before you ask for a copy. When Price County Property Records are matched against the GIS layer, the same name or parcel clue is much easier to trust.

Price County Property Records Maps

See the Wisconsin State Cartographer office in this state cartography source when you want broader parcel and map context beside Price County Property Records.

Price County property records state cartographers office

The state cartographer source is useful when parcel geometry needs a wider check beyond the county GIS page.

See the Wisconsin Department of Revenue transfer search in this state transfer source when you want statewide filing context beside Price County Property Records.

Price County property records state transfer search

The transfer search helps when a recorded deed and a transfer return need to be read together.

See the Wisconsin State Law Library property guide in this state property law source when you want recording and title terms in plain language.

Price County property records state law library guide

The law library guide is a practical backup when a record term or filing rule needs a clear explanation.

Price County Property Records Fees

The research set does not publish a full Price County fee table. What it does show is the way the office expects users to work. The older indexes matter for records before September 1951, and online ordering is available for real estate documents. That means the cost question is tied to the exact record you need and the path you use to reach it. Price County Property Records are easier to budget for when the search has already been narrowed to the right index or document range.

That is especially true for older records. If the grantor or grantee range is the right one, you can avoid paying for a broad search that does not fit the time period. The office note about attorney help is also useful because it tells you where the office role ends and legal drafting begins. Price County Property Records are most efficient when the office handles retrieval and an attorney handles drafting or correction work.

State law still gives the backdrop. Wis. Stat. § 59.43 covers recording duties, Wis. Stat. § 77.22 covers the transfer fee, and Wis. Stat. § 77.265 explains transfer return confidentiality. Wis. Stat. Chapter 706 is the key conveyance chapter when a Price County file leads to a title question.

Price County Property Records Help

If you need help with Price County Property Records, start with the Register of Deeds page, then check the grantor and grantee indexes, then move to the GIS or Beacon page if you need a parcel view. That order fits the county's structure. It is especially useful when the record is old, because the pre-1951 computer search limit means the paper indexes still carry a lot of the weight for older deeds.

Price County Property Records also benefit from the county's broader record mix. Because the office maintains births, deaths, and marriages in addition to land records, the property search can sometimes connect to a family line or an older ownership clue. That is useful when a tract was passed through a family and the document trail is thin. The record set is not just about current ownership. It is about how the county's paper trail was built over time.

The Beacon page is helpful when you want a visual check on the parcel, and the GIS page gives you the county map side. If a document appears in one place but not the other, the map can tell you whether the same land is being described in a different way. Price County Property Records are easier to trust once the deed, the index, and the map all point to the same place.

When the search turns into a legal or procedural question, the Wisconsin State Law Library is the best plain-language backup, and the Department of Revenue transfer search is the best state filing check. That gives Price County Property Records a clean local to state path without making the work harder than it needs to be.

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