Central Missouri / Missouri River Corridor
Cooper County land-record searches start with the Recorder
Cooper County's Recorder points residents to Tapestry for land-record searches and to the county GIS map for land ownership context.
A Cooper County parcel search has two different tools that people often mash together. The GIS map helps you orient yourself to land ownership and location. Tapestry is the online, pay-per-search path for recorded land records through the Recorder of Deeds in Boonville.
Use the map for the “where is it” question. Use the recorded documents for the “what was filed” question. A deed, easement, survey, or release is not replaced by a colored parcel shape on a screen. The Recorder records land instruments, but the office does not do title, easement, or lien searches for you.
That distinction is handy when land is being bought, inherited, split, or cleaned up after an old legal description causes trouble. Start with the Recorder and GIS links to find the right record trail. If the question turns into title, liens, or legal meaning, that is the point where a title company or attorney belongs in the conversation.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Cooper County. See every local note for the county on its page.