Bryan County CAD– Property Search | Oklahoma

Bryan County Oklahoma property search • Assessor and tax guide 2026

Bryan County CAD property search, assessor records, tax roll and land records guide

This guide helps Bryan County, Oklahoma property owners, buyers, land investors and real estate agents find the right official property search, verify parcel and owner details, understand assessed values, check tax records, and avoid confusing Oklahoma assessor records with Texas-style CAD pages.

Bryan County does not use a Central Appraisal District system like Texas. Use the Bryan County Assessor for appraisal and assessment records, the County Treasurer for tax bills and payments, and the County Clerk for deeds, plats and recorded land documents.

Correct official office Bryan County Assessor Office address 323 W Beech, Durant, OK 74702 Best first step Search assessor records through the official Bryan County tools, save the parcel/property ID, then use the Treasurer or Clerk only if your task is taxes or land records.
Important correction from the old page The old article gave a basic “CAD vs Assessor” warning, but it still needed stronger office separation. In Bryan County, Oklahoma, assessment records, tax payments and deed records are three different workflows. Do not use an assessor record as proof that taxes are paid, and do not use a tax roll as a legal deed search.
Verified-use note This guide uses official Bryan County Assessor, Bryan County Treasurer / Oklahoma tax roll, County Clerk land-records and Oklahoma ad valorem resources. Always verify current values, tax balances, filing rules and document records directly on official websites before buying, appealing, paying or recording.

Quick answer: where to search Bryan County property records

For property ownership, assessment value, land details, exemptions and parcel information, start with the Bryan County Assessor page and the official assessor-record search link provided there. The Assessor handles real and personal property assessment for ad valorem tax purposes.

For tax bills, tax amounts due, payment status or receipts, use the Bryan County Treasurer tax-roll system. For deeds, mortgages, releases, plats, liens and recorded land documents, use Bryan County Clerk records through OKCountyRecords.

Common search name
Bryan County CAD / Bryan County property search
Correct official office
Bryan County Assessor
Assessor
Kylie House
Assessor phone
580-924-2166
Assessor address
323 W Beech, Durant, OK 74702
Office hours
8:00 AM–4:30 PM

Quick navigation

How to search Bryan County property records step by step

The best property-search path is to start with the official Bryan County Assessor page, then open the assessor-record link provided there. Keep your first search simple because owner names, road names and rural addresses can appear in different formats.

Open the official Bryan County Assessor page. Start at the official Bryan County Assessor page. It lists the Assessor contact details and links to assessor records.
Open the assessor-record search link. Use the official assessor-record link from the county page, usually shown as ACTDATASCOUT or Assessor Records.
Choose a search method. Search by owner name, property address, parcel/property ID or other available record fields. If you have a property ID from a tax statement, use it first.
Search with fewer words first. If the full address does not work, try only the house number and core road name. For rural land, owner name, parcel ID, legal description or township/range details may work better.
Open the correct record and verify it. Confirm owner name, parcel/property ID, location, legal description, land data, improvement data and assessed value before relying on the record.
Use the right next office. If you need taxes, use the Treasurer. If you need deeds or plats, use the County Clerk. If you need value or exemption questions, contact the Assessor.
Local search tip Bryan County includes Durant, Calera, Colbert, Caddo, Achille, Bennington, Bokchito, Mead, Silo and Lake Texoma-area rural property. A road name or mailing city may not always match the way a parcel appears in assessor records, so confirm by parcel/property ID whenever possible.

Why “Bryan County CAD” is not the correct Oklahoma office name

Many users search “Bryan County CAD” because Texas uses Central Appraisal Districts. Oklahoma counties do not work that way. Bryan County uses a County Assessor for real and personal property assessment.

Use the Assessor for
  • Real property assessment records
  • Business and personal property assessment questions
  • Property values for ad valorem taxation
  • Exemption checks
  • Assessment roll questions
  • Record correction or value review questions
Do not use “CAD” for
  • Texas protest deadline assumptions
  • Texas homestead-exemption wording
  • Tax payment receipts
  • Recorded deed searches
  • Legal boundary proof
  • Mortgage or lien verification

What you can check in a Bryan County property record

A property assessment record helps users understand how a property is listed for local tax purposes. It is useful for due diligence, but it is not the same as a tax receipt, deed search or survey.

Record area What it helps verify Practical user tip
Owner name Current owner shown in assessment records Recent transactions may take time. Use County Clerk records for recorded deed proof.
Property / parcel ID Unique property reference for search and office questions Save this before calling the Assessor, Treasurer or Clerk.
Property address Location or situs address Check rural road names and city/community carefully if multiple results appear.
Legal description Lot, block, section, township, range or land description Very useful for rural land, acreage and deed matching.
Land details Acreage, land type and use context Check carefully for farms, rural tracts, Lake Texoma property and vacant land.
Improvement details Buildings, structures and related property characteristics Check square footage, building count, condition and outbuildings before value questions.
Assessed / taxable value Value used in Oklahoma ad valorem process If value looks wrong, gather evidence before calling or appealing.

Bryan County Assessor vs Treasurer vs County Clerk

This is the most important part of the article. Different property tasks belong to different offices.

User needs Correct office/tool What to do there
Search owner, value, parcel or assessment record Bryan County Assessor Use the official Assessor page and assessor records link.
Ask why value changed or property details look wrong Bryan County Assessor Call 580-924-2166 with property ID and evidence ready.
Pay taxes or print tax receipt Bryan County Treasurer Use OKTaxRolls / Bryan County Treasurer tax search.
Find deeds, liens, releases, plats or recorded instruments Bryan County Clerk / OKCountyRecords Search land records, book/page, instrument number, names or legal description.
Understand Oklahoma ad valorem rules Oklahoma Tax Commission / county assessor resources Review statewide ad valorem forms, exemptions and valuation rules.

Where to find Bryan County deeds, plats and recorded land documents

If you need legal ownership history, deed copies, mortgage releases, liens, plats, easements or recorded instruments, use Bryan County Clerk records. The Assessor record can help identify the parcel, but it is not a full land-record search.

Use County Clerk records for
  • Deeds and conveyances
  • Mortgages and releases
  • Liens and lien releases
  • Plats and subdivision records
  • Oil, gas or mineral-related instruments
  • Recorded easements and restrictions
Before searching land records
  • Get owner name from assessor records
  • Save legal description
  • Check approximate recording date
  • Know grantor/grantee names if possible
  • Use book/page or instrument number when available
Buyer warning A Bryan County property assessment record is not a title report. Before buying property, confirm deeds, liens, easements, restrictions, access and mineral-related documents with proper recorded-document and title review.

Oklahoma exemptions and assessment checks for Bryan County owners

Oklahoma has its own ad valorem rules and exemption forms. Do not copy Texas homestead or CAD protest wording into a Bryan County article. Use Oklahoma Tax Commission and Bryan County Assessor resources for current forms and eligibility.

Common items to check
  • Homestead exemption eligibility
  • Senior valuation freeze questions where applicable
  • Veteran-related exemptions
  • Agricultural or use-related classification
  • Business personal property assessment
Before contacting office
  • Know the property ID
  • Confirm owner/mailing address
  • Check filing deadline
  • Use Oklahoma ad valorem forms
  • Keep proof of submission
Avoid assuming
  • Texas CAD deadlines
  • Texas exemption names
  • Generic online advice
  • Old form years
  • Third-party property data as final proof

How to prepare for a Bryan County property assessment question or appeal

If your assessed value or property details look wrong, prepare a clean evidence file before contacting the Assessor. A good review request is specific and supported by facts.

Print or save the current property record. Keep the owner, parcel ID, address, legal description, land details and improvement data together.
Check for record errors. Look for wrong acreage, wrong square footage, wrong building count, incorrect use, incorrect property class or mailing-address issue.
Collect evidence. Use dated photos, recent sales, repair estimates, appraisals, closing statements, survey data or proof of incorrect property characteristics.
Call the Assessor first. Contact the Bryan County Assessor at 580-924-2166 with the property ID and a short explanation of the issue.
Follow official appeal instructions if needed. If the issue is not resolved informally, ask about the Board of Equalization process, deadline and required forms.
Useful script “I am asking for review of this Bryan County assessment because the property record appears to show wrong acreage / building size / condition / value. I have attached photos, comparable sales and supporting documents.”

Local insider tips for Bryan County property search

Bryan County has city properties, rural acreage, farmland, Lake Texoma recreation property, casino/tourism-area development, and small-town residential parcels. A useful search should consider the property type, not only the owner name.

For Durant-area property
  • Compare similar city/subdivision properties
  • Check commercial vs residential use carefully
  • Review improvement data after remodels
  • Confirm taxes separately with the Treasurer
For rural and farm property
  • Check acreage and legal description
  • Review land use and classification
  • Look for outbuildings or agricultural structures
  • Do not rely on map view as a legal survey
For Lake Texoma buyers
  • Confirm access and legal description
  • Check flood, slope or shoreline-related concerns
  • Verify deeds and easements through land records
  • Compare similar lake-area parcels only

Common Bryan County property-search mistakes

Mistake Why it causes trouble Better action
Searching only for “CAD” Oklahoma uses county assessor offices, not Texas-style CADs. Search Bryan County Assessor records.
Using assessor record as payment proof Assessment records do not show final tax receipt status. Use the Bryan County Treasurer tax roll.
Ignoring parcel/property ID Owner names and addresses can overlap or vary. Save the parcel/property ID from the correct record.
Skipping County Clerk records before buying Assessment records do not show every deed, lien or restriction issue. Search recorded land documents and use title review.
Calling with no evidence Assessment review needs facts, not only opinion. Prepare photos, comparable sales, estimates and record-error proof.

Documents and details to keep ready

For property search Owner name, property address, parcel/property ID, legal description, township/range details and prior tax or assessment notice.
For assessment questions Property record printout, photos, comparable sales, repair estimates, appraisal report and proof of incorrect property details.
For tax questions Tax statement, owner name, parcel/property ID, payment confirmation, Treasurer receipt and mailing address.
For deed or land-record questions Grantor/grantee names, book/page, instrument number, legal description, recording date range and property address.

Bryan County property office contact details

Office Official details Use this for
Bryan County Assessor Kylie House · 323 W Beech, Durant, OK 74702 · 580-924-2166 · khouse@bryancountyok.us Assessment records, exemptions, values, real/personal property questions and assessment roll issues.
Bryan County Treasurer Prudy Sullivan-Holt · 323 W. Beech Street, Durant, OK 74701 · 580-924-0748 · bryan@okcountytreasurers.com Tax bills, tax roll search, tax payments, receipts and delinquent-tax questions.
Bryan County Clerk County Clerk Lacy Allred · PO Box 1789, Durant, OK 74702-1789 · 580-924-2202 Recorded deeds, plats, liens, releases, book/page searches and land-record documents.

Bryan County Assessor office map

The Assessor’s office is listed at 323 W Beech in Durant, Oklahoma. Use the map for directions, but call before visiting if your question involves assessment deadlines, exemptions, appeal forms or special documents.

Helpful Oklahoma assessor video resource

This video is included as a general Oklahoma assessor-learning resource. It is not a Bryan County-specific legal instruction, but it can help users understand what an assessor does before they call the local office.

Video use tip Watch the video for general assessor background only. For Bryan County-specific values, account records, tax roll status or land records, use the official Bryan County links in this guide.

Official Bryan County property resources

Use these official resources for final confirmation before paying taxes, appealing an assessment, relying on a record, or searching deeds and land documents.

Bryan County Assessor official page ACT DataScout assessor records search Bryan County Treasurer tax roll search Bryan County Clerk land records search Oklahoma Tax Commission ad valorem resources OSU Extension explanation of Oklahoma ad valorem taxes Bryan County Treasurer official county page Bryan County Clerk official county page

Bryan County CAD property search FAQs

Is there a Bryan County CAD in Oklahoma?

No. Bryan County, Oklahoma does not use a Texas-style Central Appraisal District system. The correct office for property assessment records is the Bryan County Assessor.

What is the official Bryan County property search?

Start with the official Bryan County Assessor page and use the linked assessor-record search, commonly shown as ACTDATASCOUT or Assessor Records.

What is the Bryan County Assessor phone number?

The Bryan County Assessor phone number is 580-924-2166. Use it for assessment records, values, exemptions, real/personal property questions and assessment roll issues.

Where is the Bryan County Assessor located?

The official Bryan County Assessor page lists the address as 323 W Beech, Durant, OK 74702, with office hours from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM.

How do I search Bryan County property records by owner name?

Use the assessor-record search and enter the owner name. If the full name does not work, try the last name, partial business name or a shorter search format.

How do I search Bryan County property taxes?

Use the Bryan County Treasurer tax roll search at OKTaxRolls. You can search by owner, address, property/parcel ID, tax ID, school district and other filters.

Does the Bryan County Assessor collect property taxes?

No. The Assessor handles assessment records and values. Property tax collection, tax balances and receipts are handled by the Bryan County Treasurer.

Where do I find Bryan County deeds and land records?

Use Bryan County Clerk land records through OKCountyRecords for deeds, plats, liens, releases, book/page searches and recorded instruments.

What evidence helps with a Bryan County assessment review?

Helpful evidence includes property photos, comparable sales, repair estimates, appraisal reports, closing statements, survey details and proof of incorrect acreage, square footage or property classification.

Are Bryan County assessor records the same as a title search?

No. Assessor records are for assessment and tax purposes. For legal ownership, liens, restrictions, easements and recorded instruments, use land records and proper title review.

Independent guide disclaimer County-CAD.us is an independent information guide and is not Bryan County Government, the Bryan County Assessor, the Treasurer, the County Clerk, ACT DataScout, OKTaxRolls or any government agency. Always verify property records, taxes, payments, deadlines and legal documents directly through official sources.

Last editorial check: June 2026. Official details, links, values, tax balances, records and office procedures can change without notice; verify directly with the relevant Bryan County or Oklahoma official office before paying, appealing, recording or buying.

Free County CAD Property Tax Assistant

Estimate Taxes, Exemptions, Escrow, Protest Savings and Next Steps

This sitewide tool helps homeowners, buyers, sellers and investors understand property tax numbers before they check the official county appraisal district or tax office. It runs in your browser, does not collect personal data and gives practical next steps after each calculation.

Start Free Tool
8-in-1Calculator, checklist and official-search helper in one widget.
No loginWorks instantly without collecting names, emails or property IDs.
Mobile-firstDesigned for phone users reading county CAD articles.
HelpfulGives next steps, not only numbers.

What are you trying to do today?

Choose your main goal. The tool will guide you to the right calculation or next step.

Best for homeowners

Use Tax, Exemption and Protest tabs to understand your appraisal notice and possible savings.

Best for buyers

Use Buyer Budget and Monthly Escrow before relying only on a mortgage payment estimate.

Property Tax Estimate Calculator

Estimate annual tax using property value, assessment ratio, exemptions and local tax rate.

Homestead and Exemption Savings

Estimate how much a homestead, senior, disabled, veteran or local exemption may reduce annual tax.

Monthly Escrow / Ownership Cost

Estimate monthly property tax, insurance, HOA and reserve cushion. Useful for buyers and homeowners comparing affordability.

Property Tax Protest Savings

Estimate possible savings if your appraised value is reduced after a protest, evidence review or correction.

Appraised Value Growth / Cap Impact

Estimate how a value increase or appraisal cap may affect taxable value. Rules vary by state, county and exemption status.

Home Buyer Monthly Budget Estimate

Estimate a more realistic monthly ownership cost by adding mortgage, property tax, insurance and HOA.

Find Official County CAD and Tax Resources

Enter county and state to create safe search links. This avoids guessing official URLs and helps users find the correct county appraisal district, property search, tax payment and exemption pages.

Why this tool helps your site

It gives visitors an interactive reason to stay on the page, calculate their own numbers and move from general reading to practical action.

Best placement

  • Below county CAD articles
  • Before FAQ section on long posts
  • Inside sidebar or after first major section on desktop

Estimate disclaimer

Values are educational estimates. Visitors should confirm final values, exemptions, tax rates, payment status and deadlines with official county resources.