Michigan · Document Recording
Recording a Deed or Document in Chippewa, MI
Chippewa (population 36,785) records real-property documents through the Chippewa County Register of Deeds. Below is what it costs, how to submit, and how Jurably can prepare, notarize, and record your document for you — without a trip to the courthouse.
Chippewa recording — the essentials
- Recording office
- Chippewa County Register of Deeds
- Recording fee
- $30.00 flat recording fee (inclusive of MI Remonumentation & ROD Automation fees), regardless of page count first / Included in flat fee (no separate per-page charge); $5 Treasurer tax-certification fee for documents with a warranty clause add'l (+$3.00 added for each additional instrument assigned or discharged on a single document)
- Mailing address
- 319 Court St, Sault Sainte Marie, MI 49783
- Phone
- 906-635-6312
- Electronic recording
- Available via Simplifile, CSC, ePN, Indecomm
Formatting note: unverified (not explicitly stated on official page)
Can you e-record in Chippewa?
Yes. Chippewa accepts electronic recording through Simplifile, CSC, ePN, Indecomm, so a properly formatted document can be recorded the same or next business day without mailing paper.
How to record a document in Chippewa, Michigan
- Prepare the document so it meets Chippewa formatting rules (legal description, grantee address, signature block, and the blank margin the recorder reserves for its stamp).
- Notarize it if the instrument requires acknowledgment — most deeds and affidavits do.
- Submit electronically through Simplifile, CSC, ePN, Indecomm, or by mail to Chippewa County Register of Deeds at 319 Court St, Sault Sainte Marie, MI 49783.
- Pay the recording fee ($30.00 flat recording fee (inclusive of MI Remonumentation & ROD Automation fees), regardless of page count first / Included in flat fee (no separate per-page charge); $5 Treasurer tax-certification fee for documents with a warranty clause add'l (+$3.00 added for each additional instrument assigned or discharged on a single document)).
- Receive the recorded instrument back with its book/page or instrument number as proof of record.
How Jurably helps in Chippewa
Jurably isn’t a deed-filing desk — it’s how real-estate investors get the important paperwork done. If you’re under contract on a Chippewa property, we file a memorandum of contract to secure your equitable interest so the seller can’t sell out from under you. Need it notarized first? We handle online notarization or send a mobile notary to your signer. Then we record it — electronically through the county’s approved network — and return the recorded instrument. It’s a self-help filing service, not legal advice.
Chippewa recording — FAQ
How much does it cost to record a document in Chippewa?
The Chippewa County Register of Deeds charges $30.00 flat recording fee (inclusive of MI Remonumentation & ROD Automation fees), regardless of page count first / Included in flat fee (no separate per-page charge); $5 Treasurer tax-certification fee for documents with a warranty clause add'l (+$3.00 added for each additional instrument assigned or discharged on a single document). Additional fees may apply for extra pages, indexing, or specific document types.
Can you record documents electronically in Chippewa?
Yes. Chippewa accepts electronic recording through Simplifile, CSC, ePN, Indecomm, so a properly formatted document can be recorded the same or next business day without mailing paper.
Where do I send documents for recording in Chippewa?
Mail recordings to Chippewa County Register of Deeds: 319 Court St, Sault Sainte Marie, MI 49783 (906-635-6312).
How can Jurably help with recording in Chippewa?
If you’re securing a real-estate contract, Jurably files a memorandum of contract in Chippewa to protect your equitable interest; we also notarize documents online or in person and record them for you. Upload your document and we prepare, notarize, and file it — so you never have to visit the Chippewa recorder in person.
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Under contract in Chippewa? Secure it.
Jurably files a memorandum to protect your deal, notarizes what you need, and records it — no courthouse trip.