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Park County's online document search does not include plat maps

A Porch Note from Colorado Porch — plain-English local details for all 64 Colorado counties.

Park County’s online document search is a handy first look, with one limit worth knowing up front: it covers recorded documents from 1968 to present, and plat maps are not in it. You can pull a deed or a recorded easement, but the subdivision map itself lives somewhere else.

That gap shows up most when you are trying to read a parcel, a road, an easement, or one of the old mining-era descriptions that still shape boundaries in this county. The recorded documents give you clues. The plat being absent online says nothing about whether it matters to your lot, and it often does.

Treat the search, then, as a starting point rather than the whole answer. A title company, a surveyor, an attorney, or the Clerk and Recorder can tell you which records a specific property actually needs and how to obtain them. A boundary or access question is not something a quick online search should be left to settle on its own.

The Online Document Search and the Clerk and Recorder pages are the two doors here: the first for what is digitized, the second for everything, including the plats, that is not.

Sources

Official or primary sources used for this note. Local details can change, so confirm before acting.

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