Prairie County, Arkansas
Not EligiblePrairie County does not currently accept electronic recording. Documents require traditional submission to the Circuit Clerk in Des Arc and DeValls Bluff.
Prairie County at a glance
- Population (2024 est.)
- 7,935
- County seats
- Des Arc and DeValls Bluff
- Recording office
- Circuit Clerk
- Typical home value (May 2026)
- $151,000
- FIPS code
- 05117
Not yet — Prairie County does not currently accept electronic recording. Real estate documents must be submitted as paper originals to the Circuit Clerk's office in Des Arc and DeValls Bluff, by mail or in person. Counties adopt e-recording on their own schedules, so this status can change; we review eligibility regularly.
Prairie County is home to about 7,935 residents (U.S. Census Bureau, 2024 estimate), ranking 67th by population among the 75 Arkansas jurisdictions in this directory. Its population has declined about 3.8% since 2020. Typical home values in the county are around $151,000 (Zillow Home Value Index, May 2026), so promptly and correctly recorded deeds and liens matter for buyers, sellers, and lenders here.
In Arkansas, the elected Circuit Clerk serves as ex officio recorder of deeds. Ten Arkansas counties are split into two judicial districts, each with its own courthouse and its own recording office — documents must be recorded in the district where the property sits.
You can still notarize documents online with Notaron even though this recorder requires paper submission — RON is valid for recordable documents in Arkansas. After the online notarization, print the notarized output (or have us ship it) and submit it to the recording office the traditional way.
Frequently asked questions
Does Prairie County accept electronic recording?
Not currently. Prairie County requires paper originals to be submitted by mail or in person. Check back — counties regularly add e-recording support.
Who records deeds in Prairie County?
Real estate documents are recorded by the Circuit Clerk, located in Des Arc and DeValls Bluff (the county seats).
Can I notarize online and record in Prairie County?
You can notarize online — RON is valid in Arkansas — but because this recorder does not yet accept electronic submissions, you'll need to print and deliver the notarized document for recording.
Who uses e-recording with online notarization?
Notaron pairs 24/7 remote online notarization with e-recording-ready output, built for the teams that record documents in Prairie County every day.
Title & escrow companies
Run fully remote closings for Prairie County transactions with RON, then submit the recorded instruments through your existing workflow.
Notaron for title companies →Lenders & loan servicing
Notarize mortgages, modifications, and satisfactions online for Prairie County borrowers — legally valid nationwide, with a clean audit trail for every session.
Notaron for lenders →Law firms & attorneys
Get client documents for Prairie County notarized on video in minutes — with recorded, identity-verified sessions your file can rely on.
Notaron for law firms →Notarize documents for Prairie County online
Connect with a licensed notary on video 24/7 — $25 per session, legally valid nationwide and accepted by recorders, courts, and lenders.
Start a NotarizationOther counties in Arkansas
Population: U.S. Census Bureau, Vintage 2024 county estimates. Home values: Zillow Home Value Index (ZHVI). County data updated 2026-07-11. E-recording eligibility is reviewed regularly but can change — confirm with the recording office before submitting time-sensitive documents.