Indiana Free Divorce Records

By Ben Kingsley


Records of birth, death, marriage and divorce are called Vital Records in United States. These records are important as they provide researchers with valuable information such as genealogy of a certain family as well as supporting documents in certain instances. These records are normally available from the Department of Health of each State; however, there are some instances when the records are also available from the county where the person resides. One example would be obtaining divorce records in Indiana.

Indiana divorce records are not available from the State's Division of Vital Records office and are available from the Clerk's office in the county where the divorce was granted. These records date back to 1795 up to the present. Each county has their own set of guidelines and fees vary from one county to another. The counties' records depend on the date when the counties were first established. Requests for divorce records are available either through fax, mail, e-mail or in person.

Access to divorce records is open only to those individuals eligible under the State Laws. As divorce records are confidential by nature, persons who have close affinity to the parties named in the divorce, their siblings, children and appointed persons are the only ones that can access the records.

The process of obtaining divorce records is simple and easy. In Marion County for example, researchers have to submit a request form, a self-addressed stamped envelope and payment to obtain the records. Each record costs $1/page and an additional $1 for the certification. For those who are not sure how much the request would cost, they can include a minimum of $5 in their request(s). Any balance will be refunded back to the researcher. To obtain the copy in person, the researcher can visit the county record division during working hours. They should present current/valid ID before any request will be processed. The processing time depends upon the volume of the requests and information provided by the researcher.

Another example would be in the Allen County where the records are available from the County Courthouse Records Division. Requests via standard mail, e-mail, fax and in-person are all accepted. To request via standard mail, the researcher has to download the request form from the website, fill up the pertinent details and send the request to the Records Division. Records that need certification for purpose of employment, social security and court proceedings should be noted in the request form. Payment fees are the same as those with Marion County.

For those who want to obtain their own divorce copies, the easiest and perhaps the simplest way to do so is to check out online sites that offer free public divorce records. One can easily retrieve the information that they want without having to wait for days for the report. Full reports are usually available for a minimal fee and processing time is shorter than coursing the request through the County office.




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