Texas · Document Recording
Recording a Deed or Document in Cochran County, TX
Cochran County (population 2,547) records real-property documents through the Cochran County Clerk. 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.
Cochran County recording — the essentials
- Recording office
- Cochran County Clerk
- Recording fee
- unverified (official 2015 fee schedule PDF exists but could not be parsed; figure not independently confirmed) first / unverified add'l (+Plat/map $5.00/page; certification fee $5.00 + $1.00/page; DD214 military discharge no charge; penalty fee = 2x regular fee for oversized pages (>8.5x14), illegible signer names, non-positive-print copies, or oversized/multiple riders - per official fee schedule referenced on county site)
- Mailing address
- Cochran County Clerk, Room 102 Courthouse, 100 North Main Street, Morton, TX 79346
- Phone
- 806-266-5450
- Electronic recording
- Paper / mail
Can you e-record in Cochran County?
Cochran County records documents submitted by mail or in person. Jurably handles this on the paper rail — we prepare, notarize, mail, and track your document to a recorded instrument number.
How to record a document in Cochran County, Texas
- Prepare the document so it meets Cochran County 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 by mail to Cochran County Clerk at Cochran County Clerk, Room 102 Courthouse, 100 North Main Street, Morton, TX 79346.
- Pay the recording fee (unverified (official 2015 fee schedule PDF exists but could not be parsed; figure not independently confirmed) first / unverified add'l (+Plat/map $5.00/page; certification fee $5.00 + $1.00/page; DD214 military discharge no charge; penalty fee = 2x regular fee for oversized pages (>8.5x14), illegible signer names, non-positive-print copies, or oversized/multiple riders - per official fee schedule referenced on county site)).
- Receive the recorded instrument back with its book/page or instrument number as proof of record.
Let Jurably record it for you
Skip the courthouse. Upload your signed document to Jurably and we prepare it to Cochran County standards, arrange remote online notarization if it is needed, record it by certified mail, and return the recorded instrument — usually within a couple of business days. It is a self-help filing service, not legal advice.
Cochran County recording — FAQ
How much does it cost to record a document in Cochran County?
The Cochran County Clerk charges unverified (official 2015 fee schedule PDF exists but could not be parsed; figure not independently confirmed) first / unverified add'l (+Plat/map $5.00/page; certification fee $5.00 + $1.00/page; DD214 military discharge no charge; penalty fee = 2x regular fee for oversized pages (>8.5x14), illegible signer names, non-positive-print copies, or oversized/multiple riders - per official fee schedule referenced on county site). Additional fees may apply for extra pages, indexing, or specific document types.
Can you record documents electronically in Cochran County?
Cochran County records documents submitted by mail or in person. Jurably handles this on the paper rail — we prepare, notarize, mail, and track your document to a recorded instrument number.
Where do I send documents for recording in Cochran County?
Mail recordings to Cochran County Clerk: Cochran County Clerk, Room 102 Courthouse, 100 North Main Street, Morton, TX 79346 (806-266-5450).
Can Jurably record my document in Cochran County for me?
Yes. Upload your signed document, and Jurably prepares it, arranges notarization if it is required, records it by mail, and returns the recorded instrument to you — so you never have to visit the Cochran County recorder in person.
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Record in Cochran County without the courthouse trip.
Upload your document — Jurably prepares, notarizes, and records it, then sends back the recorded instrument.