Mississippi Document Recording - Real Estate Documents

Get your documents recorded in any county in the State of Mississippi as well as any county in the United States!

We have several inexpensive options to record your real estate documents which include first class mail away, priority mail with tracking and FedEx/UPS delivery.

In time sensitive situations our nationwide network of recording agents hand deliver your document directly to the clerk to ensure your documents are recorded without delay. You go straight to the front of the line, past piles of documents mailed to the clerk's office, which can take weeks to get recorded. Once your document is recorded, we provide a copy of the recorded document or a county receipt with recording information – whichever fits your needs.

Occasionally, some counties become badly backlogged. This could delay the recording of your document even when we hand deliver it. If this happens, we monitor your document closely and keep you informed of the progress until we confirm it has been recorded.

Fast Electronic Document Recording in the State of Mississippi

We can now electronically record your real estate documents in many counties around the US! Send us your documents and we'll record them electronically – saving you time & shipping costs.

When the recording is complete, you receive a confirmation of recording and a copy of the recorded document. This is much faster and more cost efficient than standard recording and we recommend it whenever possible! Find out more about electronic document recording.

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Kirsten, I would just like to say that we appreciate your service. Also, that you are willing to go above and beyond by offering other services and products as well. You do a great job!
A.B. (Client, MS)

Mississippi Counties Served:

Adams • Alcorn • Amite • Attala • Benton • Bolivar • Calhoun • Caroll • Chickasaw • Choctaw • Claiborne • Clarke • Clay • Coahoma • Copia • Covington • DeSoto • Forrest • Franklin • George • Greene • Grenada • Hancock • Harrison • Hinds – Raymond • Hinds-Jackson • Holmes • Humphreys • Issaquena • Itawamba • Jackson • Jasper • Jefferson • Jefferson Davis • Jones • Kemper • Lafayette • Lamar • Lauderdale • Lawrence • Leake • Lee • Leflore • Lincoln • Lowndes • Madison • Marion • Marshall • Monroe • Montgomery • Neshoba • Newton • Noxubee • Oktibbeha • Panola • Pearl River • Perry • Pike • Pontotoc • Prentiss • Quitman • Rankin • Scott • Sharkey • Simpson • Smith • Stone • Sunflower • Tallahatchie • Tate • Tippah • Tishomingo • Tunica • Union • Walthall • Warren • Washington • Wayne • Webster • Wilkinson • Winston • Yalobusha • Yazoo

Mississippi - Economics

Mississippi is traditionally one of the more rural states in the Union; not until 1965 did manufacturing take over as the leading revenue-producing sector of its economy. In 2000, Mississippi ranked third in the nation in the production of cotton, but soil erosion resulting from overcultivation and the destruction caused by the boll weevil have led to the increased agricultural diversification. The other most important crops are rice and soybeans. Today broiler chicken production, aquaculture (chiefly catfish raising), and dairying are increasingly important. The state’s most valuable mineral resources, petroleum and natural gas, have been developed only since the 1930s.

Industry has grown rapidly with the development of oil resources and has been helped by the Tennessee Valley Authority and by a state program to balance agriculture with industry, under which many communities have subsidized and attracted new industries. Revenue from industrial products, including chemicals, plastics, foods, and wood products, have exceeded those from agriculture in recent years. On the Gulf coast there is a profitable fishing and seafood processing industry, and gambling is important along the Gulf Coast and in long impoversihed Tunica County, in the northwest. There are military air facilities at Columbus, Biloxi, and Meridian, as well as the Stennis Space Flight Center at Bay St. Louis.

Mississippi - Facts & Figures

Area:47,716 sq mi (123,584 sq km)
Population:2,844,658 (as of 2000), a 10.5% increase since the 1990 census
Capital:Jackson
Largest City:Jackson
Statehood:Dec 10, 1817 (20th state)
Highest Point:Woodall Mt., 806 ft (246 m)
Lowest Point:Sea Level
Nickname:Magnolia State
Motto:Virtute et Armis (By Valor and Arms)
Bird:Mockingbird
Flower:Magnolia
Tree:Magnolia
Abbreviation:Miss, MS

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