How the Iowa Open Records Law works
Iowa's Open Records Law (Iowa Code Chapter 22) establishes that public records are presumptively open and shall be available for examination by any person. The law covers all state and local government agencies, including state departments, boards and commissions, counties, cities, and school districts. Iowa's law does not specify a hard deadline for response but requires agencies to respond without "unnecessary delay", a standard interpreted by courts case-by-case.
Fees may be charged for the actual cost of searching, copying, and safeguarding records. Iowa's statute contains a substantial number of exemptions, including certain tax records, peace officer investigative reports, and personnel records. Disputes may be taken to district court, where a requester who prevails may recover attorney's fees. Iowa does not have a centralized administrative appeals body for records disputes, meaning litigation is often the primary enforcement mechanism.
Prefer to file yourself? Visit the official Iowa portal ↗
All Iowa agencies (4)
Every Iowa agency we file public records requests with. Click an agency to start a request.
