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  1. Court Records. Criminal Law. Disability and Language Access. Divorce and Marriage. Domestic Violence. Family and Children. Fees and Payments. Find an Attorney. Going to Court.

  2. Many Register of Deeds offices have their own websites. You can find contact information for your Register of Deeds. The clerk of court’s office has records of court proceedings affecting real estate, such as records of foreclosures, evictions, partitions, and condemnations, as well as estates, divorces, judgments, and liens on real property.

  3. eFiling. eFiling (File & Serve) offers secure online access for attorneys and self-represented litigants to. Submit court documents online to the clerk's office in eCourts counties. Attorneys filing cases in eCourts counties are required to use eFiling (File & Serve) as of the go-live date. All users must register prior to using eFiling.

  4. NCAOC will transition from legacy online services to the new eCourts services. If you do not find your citation, it is possible that your citation was issued in one of the counties that use eCourts services. To find the list of counties where eCourts services are currently available, click here.

  5. Search online court records from North Carolina Superior Courts, Justice Courts, and Circuit Courts for free. Lookup civil, family law, probate, small claims, labour, personal injury and other types of North Carolina State Court cases by name, case number, party, attorney, judge, docket entry & more.

  6. How can I access Civil Case Records. Information about civil cases in the North Carolina court system can be accessed on the public, self-service terminals in the clerk of court’s office in any county. View a user’s manual for the system in which the information is stored. The file for a court case can be viewed by visiting the clerk of ...

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  8. Search for North Carolina court public records online by logging in to the application.

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