Minnesota E-Recording Eligibility

County data coming soon for Minnesota.

Minnesota is building a robust electronic recording ecosystem for real estate documents. As e-recording expands across Minnesota, title companies, lenders, notaries, and closing professionals benefit from expedited document processing and minimized risk of recording problems or holdups. Understanding where e-recording is accepted in Minnesota helps determine whether Remote Online Notarization (RON) transactions can be completed fully digitally, or whether paper originals and mail-back recording are still required. Our statewide e-eligibility index tracks which counties accept electronic recording for deeds, mortgage recording, lien release recording, and other real estate documents. The index shows which Minnesota counties accept online document recording and identifies RON compliant counties that support digital document recording. Whether you need to record a deed in Minnesota, submit mortgage documents electronically, or understand Minnesota county recorder requirements, this guide helps you navigate online recording options, county readiness, timelines, and RON-based workflow decisions. For real estate attorneys, escrow officers, signing services, lenders, title companies, and individual consumers, knowing which counties accept e-recording in Minnesota is essential for planning digital real estate closing workflows and determining if online closing services are available in your area. The Minnesota e-recording landscape continues to evolve as more counties adopt electronic recording systems. Our index reflects vendor integrations, county automation progress, and policy announcements from Minnesota county recorders and state associations.