Start with your county's property appraiser and clerk of court websites. The property appraiser shows ownership history, assessed values, tax history, and basic property details like year built, square footage, and lot size. The clerk of court records show deed transfers, liens, mortgages, and any legal actions involving the property.
Your local building department maintains permit records that show what work has been done on the property, when it was done, and whether it passed inspection. This is especially useful for understanding additions, renovations, and major system replacements.
For a broader history, you can search newspaper archives for the address, check historical maps through your local library or the USGS, and look at aerial imagery over time using Google Earth's historical imagery feature to see how the property and surrounding area have changed.
Your title company will conduct a thorough title search as part of any purchase, which reveals the complete chain of ownership, any liens or encumbrances, and any recorded legal issues with the property.
Understanding a propertys history gives you context that is not visible in the current listing, and the information is largely public in Florida and across the Southeast.
In North Carolina and throughout the Southeast, the starting points for property history research are the county property appraisers website (which shows ownership history, sale dates, and purchase prices going back years), the county clerk of courts (which shows recorded deeds, liens, judgments, and any lis pendens or foreclosure filings), and the county building department (which shows permit history for improvements, additions, and system replacements).
For additional context, Zillow and Realtor.com both maintain listing history databases showing prior listing dates, prices, and days-on-market for most properties that have been listed on the MLS. If the property was involved in a foreclosure, the court records are public and searchable. For older properties where the MLS history may be incomplete, a title search by a licensed Florida or North Carolina title company will produce a comprehensive chain of ownership going back decades. Combining the property appraiser records, the permit history, and the MLS listing history gives you a complete picture of what the property has been through before you make an offer.
Kevin Neely & Kaitlynd Robbins | K2 Sells, Keller Williams Elite Partners
Some resources to find out more about the property are the county assessors, county recorders, google search, a title company can pull a property profile or do a title search, talking with a great local agent that is familiar with the neighborhood and talking with neighbors is a great resource.
If you are referring to the buy and sale history of a home, that can be found in a few places, such as the county tax records for the property or a real estate agent and have them look at the Multiple Listing Service and see the history there. If you are referencing a Historic Home.... That can be in the historic registry fo the area. and I always encourage my clients to google the address. One of my investors found out the a home was a known drug activity house previously by seeing the google activity that come up with the police calls to that address.... You never know what you can find...
This can be a very fun and interesting challenge. I recently listed a house in a very historic area and found the public library very useful when it came to the specific history of that town and area where the house was located. I would start there.
In NC, the cleanest way to learn a property’s “paper trail” is to pull county public records and match them with MLS history.
Start with the County Register of Deeds (ROD): Search by owner name or address to see the deed chain, sale dates/prices (sometimes), and recorded docs like deeds of trust (mortgages), liens, easements, plats, and HOA declarations. Most counties have an online ROD search.
Check the County GIS/Tax Assessor site: This shows tax value, lot size, zoning, tax bills, prior sales (often), sketch/measurements, and sometimes permit links.
Look up permits/inspections: Use the county/city Building Inspections/Permitting portal (or call) to see permits pulled, finals, COs, and major upgrades—great for verifying renovations.
Court records (if needed): For foreclosures, probate, or lawsuits, use the NC court system’s public records/search.
Quick tip: Addresses can be messy (road name changes, unit numbers, rural routes). If the address search is thin, search by PIN/Parcel ID from GIS or by the current owner name from tax records.