State Ag · North Carolina

North Carolina Attorney General's Office

North CarolinaState AgNorth Carolina Public Records Law-1 business days

North Carolina Attorney General's Office processes public records requests under North Carolina Public Records Law. Requests carry a -1 business days response window.

File a request with North Carolina Attorney General's Office

FREE TO FILE
North Carolina Attorney General's Officevia email · agency contact
North Carolina Public Records LawN.C.G.S. § 132-1 · -1 business days

Replace [BRACKETED] placeholders with your specific details before submitting.

Request fee waiver — we include public-interest fee waiver language automatically. If the agency quotes a fee, we'll notify you before any charges.

Filed with North Carolina Attorney General's Office within 24 hours · deadline tracked automatically · follow-ups sent if the agency goes silent

Filing process

How records requests work with North Carolina Attorney General's Office

Your request is filed in your name under North Carolina Public Records Law. We act as your communications agent — routing through email, tracking the statutory deadline, and following up when the agency goes silent.

  1. 1

    Filed (day 0)

    Submitted to North Carolina Attorney General's Office.

  2. 2

    Acknowledgment (typically 1–3 days)

    Agency confirms receipt and assigns a tracking number. The statutory clock keeps running.

  3. 3

    Response window (-1 business days)

    Under North Carolina Public Records Law, the agency must respond within -1 business days. If exemptions are claimed, they must be cited specifically.

  4. 4

    Records delivered or denied

    No exemptions: records delivered. Partial denial: records released with redactions. Full denial: written justification required.

  5. 5

    Appeal if denied

    We draft an appeal to Superior Court and can connect you with a public records attorney.

Governing law

North Carolina Public Records Law

N.C.G.S. § 132-1

North Carolina Attorney General's Office is governed by North Carolina Public Records Law, which requires a response within -1 business days. Anyone may file — no residency requirement.

Frequently asked

North Carolina Attorney General's Office public records FAQ

Related agencies

Other agencies in North Carolina

What to request

Common records from North Carolina Attorney General's Office

Jurisdiction

All North Carolina public records resources