What we do
Every week, thousands of estate-related documents are recorded in county clerk offices across Texas - affidavits of heirship, small estate affidavits, affidavits of death, and executor's, administrator's, and personal representative's deeds. They sit in dozens of separate county portals, in scanned image form, with no consistent way to search across them.
We collect those filings, read them with OCR and modern document models, and parse them into consistent fields - decedent, heirs and distributees, property, parties, and dates - so you can search, filter, and pull them through a single API instead of clicking through one county website at a time.
What's in the data
- Index metadata - recorded date, instrument number, county, document type, grantor/grantee, and legal description, sourced directly from the county record index.
- Parsed details - the decedent, heirs and their relationships, property address, and other entities extracted from the document text.
- Source pages - the original recorded document images each record was parsed from.
Who uses it
Title and real-estate professionals clearing chains of title, estate and probate attorneys, genealogists and heir-search firms, and researchers who need estate filings as structured data rather than loose PDFs.
Where it comes from
Everything we publish originates in public county records, accessed under the Texas Public Information Act. We are an independent service and are not affiliated with any county or government agency. For details on how records are collected and parsed, see Sources & methodology, and for permitted uses see our Acceptable Use Policy.