Where to Find County Clerk Information: Texas County Clerk Directory

Texas has 254 counties, and each county maintains an elected County Clerk responsible for public records, probate filings, court records, and marriage licenses.

This Texas County Clerk Directory provides direct links to every Texas County Clerk office so you can quickly find the official clerk website for any county in Texas.

Texas County Clerk Websites

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Texas trivia:
There is only one Texas county that begins with “I” — Irion County.

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Jump to County: A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | R | S | T | U | V | W | Y | Z

Who is the County Clerk in My Texas County?

Each Texas county elects a County Clerk who is responsible for maintaining official county records, probate filings, court documents, and marriage licenses. Texas has 254 counties, and each county has an elected County Clerk.

Use the directory above to find the current County Clerk for a specific county and visit the official county clerk website for that county.

Records Available From Texas County Clerks

County clerks in Texas maintain a wide range of official public records and court filings. Depending on the county, the county clerk may provide access to records such as marriage licenses and marriage records, probate filings and estate records, misdemeanor court records, assumed name certificates (DBA filings), public records and document filings, and civil case filings in county courts.

Use the Texas County Clerk Directory above to find the official clerk website for any county where you need to search records or file documents.

County Clerk FAQs

What does a County Clerk do?

In Texas, the County Clerk maintains official public records, probate filings, court records, marriage licenses, and other documents filed with the county courts. The clerk’s office also provides access to many public records and filings maintained by the county.

How do I find my County Clerk?

Each Texas county elects its own county clerk. Use the directory above to find the official county clerk website for any of the 254 counties in Texas.

How many county clerks are there in Texas?

Texas has 254 counties, and each county has a County Clerk responsible for maintaining county court records, probate filings, and other public records.

What records are available from a county clerk?

County clerks typically maintain marriage licenses, probate records, court filings, property records, and other official public documents for the county.

How do I contact my County Clerk in Texas?

You can contact your county clerk by visiting the official county clerk website for your county. The directory above provides direct links to the official clerk website for every Texas county.

What is the difference between a county clerk and a district clerk in Texas?

In Texas, the County Clerk and the District Clerk serve different courts and maintain different types of records.

The County Clerk generally maintains records for the county courts. These records may include probate filings, misdemeanor cases, marriage licenses, assumed name certificates, and other county-level filings.

The District Clerk maintains records for the district courts, which typically handle felony criminal cases, divorce proceedings, major civil lawsuits, and other matters within the jurisdiction of the district courts.

Because Texas counties often have both county courts and district courts, many counties have both a County Clerk and a District Clerk, each responsible for maintaining records for their respective courts.

Need help calculating filing deadlines? See our guides on Texas Answer Deadlines and How to Count Court Deadlines.