Search Carter County Divorce Decree

Carter County divorce decree records are routed through the county circuit court system, with the Clerk and Master handling Chancery materials and the Circuit Court Clerk handling the main case file. If you need a decree tied to Elizabethton or another part of Carter County, the first step is deciding whether you want a docket look, a case file copy, or a state certificate. The county gives you a direct office path, a searchable portal, and a clear in-person route, so a good search usually starts with the local court office before moving to Tennessee Vital Records or TSLA for older material.

Search Divorce Decree Records

Sponsored Results

Carter County Divorce Decree Facts

8-4:30 Office Hours
423 Local Contact Area Code
Suite 906 Circuit Clerk Office
Chancery Secondary Record Office

Carter County Divorce Decree Search

The Carter County divorce decree search path begins with the Circuit Court Clerk case search portal. The county site allows you to move from a general records look to a more focused case search without going straight to a mail request. That helps when you know part of the party name or you only have a rough date. The Circuit Court Civil division handles divorces and similar matters, so the record trail is usually strong once you know which court to ask. The office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM, which makes a phone call or walk-in check practical before you ask for copies.

The county clerk and master office is the other important path. Chancery records can hold divorce-related materials or related civil work, and the clerk and master office is located at 801 East Elk Avenue in Elizabethton. That matters because a Carter County Divorce Decree request can require a different office than the one that manages the portal. If the case is older, split across court types, or tied to a specific order, checking both offices can save a return trip.

For searches that begin with a name only, the county portal is usually the fastest place to start. For searches that need a certified copy, the in-person office remains the best choice. For historic questions, TSLA can help you bridge the gap once the county system stops showing what you need.

Carter County Divorce Decree Records

The Carter County Circuit Court Clerk keeps divorce decrees, case files, and civil documents for the county. The office address is 900 East Elk Avenue, Suite 906, Elizabethton, TN 37643, and the phone number is (423) 542-1835. If you need a fax confirmation, the clerk fax number is (423) 542-3742. Those contact points matter when a decree request needs a direct office answer instead of a broad county portal search.

The Carter County court structure is useful to understand. Circuit Court Civil handles divorces and related civil matters. Chancery records may also matter when the case included equity issues, property disputes, or related orders. The county clerk and master office at 801 East Elk Avenue, Elizabethton, TN 37643 is the place to ask about those records. The county portal gives the public a central place to start, but the actual decree copy still comes from the office that holds the file.

The Carter County Circuit Court site is the best official starting point for a Carter County divorce decree lookup when you need the county's own portal and clerk path.

Carter County Circuit Court site for divorce decree records

That office is the main local route for current and recent divorce decree requests.

The Carter County government site supports the county-level record path when you need office context or a local contact tree.

Carter County government portal for divorce decree records

Use it when you need to connect the divorce decree search to the broader county office structure.

The general sessions resource page is another useful local reference when a divorce decree search overlaps with related court questions.

Carter County court resource page for divorce decree records

It gives a second official lane for county court navigation.

How Carter County Divorce Decree Copies Work

Carter County does not publish a single fee sheet in the research here, so the safest move is to call the Circuit Court Clerk before you ask for copies. That keeps the request aligned with the exact document type you want. A plain copy, a certified copy, and a docket check do not always cost the same thing, and the right office can tell you which path is fastest. Because the county clerk and master and the Circuit Court Clerk sit in different roles, it helps to confirm the office before you drive to Elizabethton.

If you only need a divorce certificate rather than the full decree, Tennessee Vital Records is the better state route. The state office can issue a certificate copy, while the county office is where you go for the full case file. That distinction matters in Carter County because people sometimes ask for the wrong paper and end up with a document that is too short for their actual use. A certificate proves the divorce happened. The decree shows the terms.

When you are still sorting out which copy you need, the county office can tell you whether the record sits in Circuit Court or Chancery Court and whether the case has moved into older records holdings.

Historic Carter County Divorce Decree Records

Historic Carter County divorce decree work may require more than the county portal. The research says older records may sit with Carter County Archives and the Tennessee State Library and Archives. That is a practical clue when the case is old, the filing year is fuzzy, or the parties only know that a divorce happened long ago. TSLA can help with older court papers, and the county archive path can point you to documents that no longer appear in the live case search system.

Historical work is also where county court divisions matter more. A decree, a civil docket, and a chancery order can each sit in a different place depending on the case history. The county research shows that Carter County maintains those lines clearly, with the Circuit Court Clerk as the central office for divorce records and the Clerk and Master handling Chancery records. That makes the county a solid place to work from when you have only partial information.

TSLA's divorce records FAQ is a useful backup when a Carter County divorce decree search reaches older records.

Tennessee Divorce Decree help from TSLA

That guide helps when the county portal is not enough.

Carter County Divorce Decree Help

For filing support, Tennessee court forms are the statewide reference point. If a Carter County divorce decree search is tied to a new filing, a correction, or a post-divorce issue, the approved forms page can tell you which packet belongs in the county file. That is useful because the form set changes depending on whether children are involved, whether the case is agreed, and whether you need post-decree changes later on. The county office still handles the paper, but the state forms show how the paper should look.

The Tennessee court system also supports self-help users who want to understand the process before asking for a decree copy. That is important in Carter County because the office names are easy to mix up. The Circuit Court Clerk is not the same as the Clerk and Master, and the exact record may live in one office instead of the other. A quick review of the form packet and court page can reduce that confusion before you call.

For outside help, the Tennessee Bar Association can point people toward family law information and referral services. It is a support tool, not a records office, but it can help when the decree request is part of a larger legal problem.

Tennessee court-approved divorce forms help frame a Carter County divorce decree request when the case is still active or just being finalized.

Tennessee Divorce Decree court forms

Use that packet when the county office tells you the filing or correction step comes first.

The Tennessee Bar Association is a useful support source if the Carter County divorce decree question is part of a bigger family law issue.

Tennessee Divorce Decree legal help from the Tennessee Bar Association

It can help you narrow the issue before you return to the county office.

Note: A Carter County divorce decree search can cross both Circuit Court and Chancery records, so the right office matters as much as the right case number.

Search Divorce Decree Records

Sponsored Results

Browse Carter County Divorce Decree Records

Carter County gives a direct and practical route to divorce decree records. The county portal, the Circuit Court Clerk office, and the Clerk and Master office each solve a different part of the request. That makes the county a good fit for people who already know the city or case year and just need the file moved to the right desk.

If the record is old, TSLA and county archive work become more important. If the record is recent, the Circuit Court Clerk is usually enough. If you only need a certificate, the state office may be the quickest path. The county research supports all three options, which is what makes Carter County useful for both simple and layered divorce decree searches.