Las Vegas · Reno · All 17 Counties

Nevada Asset Search Services

U.S. Asset Records provides professional asset search services covering all 17 Nevada counties. Our investigation covers real property through county assessor and recorder offices, vehicles through the Nevada DMV, and business entities through the Nevada Secretary of State.

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All 17 Counties · Flat-Fee Pricing · 24-48 Hours · FCRA/GLBA Compliant

Quick Answer

A Nevada asset search from U.S. Asset Records costs $125 flat-fee and is delivered in 24 to 48 hours. It identifies real property, business interests, vehicles, watercraft, aircraft, UCC filings, and recorded judgments across all 17 counties and nationwide. Searches support Nevada judgment enforcement under NRS Chapter 21, divorce, probate, and pre-litigation evaluation, with full FCRA, GLBA, and DPPA compliance. The subject is never contacted.

Authoritative Answer · Verified by U.S. Asset Records

What is a Nevada asset search and how does it support litigation, judgment enforcement, divorce, and probate in Nevada?

A Nevada asset search is a professional investigation that identifies real property, business interests, vehicles, watercraft, aircraft, UCC filings, recorded judgments, and federal court records associated with an individual or business entity in all 17 Nevada counties and nationwide. Nevada asset searches support Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) Chapter 21 enforcement of judgments, NRS Chapter 125 community property division in divorce, NRS Chapter 132-156 estate administration in probate, fraudulent transfer claims under the Nevada Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (NRS Chapter 112), and pre-litigation collectibility evaluation in Nevada District Court. Nevada is uniquely important in asset investigations because the state is a major asset protection and entity formation jurisdiction; many subjects nationwide hold Nevada LLCs and Nevada trusts, requiring Nevada Secretary of State research even when the subject does not reside in Nevada. U.S. Asset Records performs Nevada asset searches in 24 to 48 hours at flat-fee pricing of $125 per Asset Profile Report or $250 per FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status Profile, with findings sourced from county recorder filings (especially Clark County for Las Vegas), the Nevada Secretary of State, Nevada DMV, federal court (District of Nevada), and additional public records databases.

Nevada Asset Search at a Glance

Service purposeIdentify assets in Nevada and nationwide for litigation and enforcement
Geographic coverageAll 17 Nevada counties + District of Nevada federal court + nationwide
Price (non-creditor)$125 flat-fee Asset Profile Report
Price (creditor-status, FCRA)$250 flat-fee for collection use
Delivery24 to 48 hours · same-day rush available
ComplianceFCRA · GLBA · DPPA · FDCPA
NV-specific recordsNV Secretary of State · 17 county recorders · NV UCC · NV DMV · NV District Court
Court systemNV District Court · Justice Court · Family Court · federal (District of Nevada)
NV enforcement statutesNRS Chapter 21 · NRS 125 (divorce) · NRS Chapter 112 (Nevada UVTA)
Property regimeCommunity property state (Family Code analysis required)
Asset protection statusMajor asset protection jurisdiction (NV trusts · LLC charging-order primacy)
ConfidentialitySubject is never contacted or alerted to investigation
ProviderU.S. Asset Records (since 2018, law firms trust U.S. Asset Records)

10 Nevada Public Record Sources Queried in Every Asset Search

  1. Clark County Recorder (Las Vegas Metro): Clark County contains Las Vegas, Henderson, Boulder City, Mesquite, and surrounding areas. Approximately 73% of Nevada’s population lives in Clark County, making this the dominant property research target. Records include deeds, deeds of trust, recorded judgments, federal and state tax liens, mechanics liens, and lis pendens.
  2. Washoe County Recorder (Reno-Sparks Metro): Washoe County contains Reno, Sparks, Incline Village, and the bulk of Northern Nevada’s economic activity. Approximately 13% of Nevada’s population. Records include all real property recordings plus mortgage liens.
  3. 15 Other Nevada County Recorders: Carson City (state capital), Douglas (Stateline/Tahoe), Lyon, Storey, Nye (Pahrump), Elko, Eureka, Lander, Humboldt, Mineral, Esmeralda, White Pine, Pershing, Lincoln, Churchill. Rural Nevada counties cover the bulk of Nevada’s geographic area but only 14% of population. Mining property and ranch holdings are common.
  4. Nevada Secretary of State Business Filings: Domestic and foreign LLCs, corporations, business trusts, limited partnerships, and series LLCs filed with the Nevada Secretary of State. Nevada is one of the most popular states for entity formation due to favorable charging-order primacy, no state income tax, and strong privacy protections. Includes officer, member, manager, and registered agent records.
  5. Nevada UCC Filings (Article 9 at SOS): Uniform Commercial Code Article 9 filings recorded with the Nevada Secretary of State. Real-estate-related fixture filings are recorded at the county level.
  6. Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles: Vehicle, motorcycle, RV, trailer, and commercial vehicle registrations under DPPA permissible purpose. Nevada’s tourism and entertainment economy creates substantial vehicle ownership across Clark and Washoe counties.
  7. Nevada District Court Records (All 11 Judicial Districts): Civil litigation, recorded judgments under NRS § 17.150, lis pendens filings under NRS § 14.010, and pending mortgage foreclosure proceedings. Nevada District Court is the state’s general jurisdiction trial court, with the Eighth Judicial District (Clark County) being one of the busiest in the U.S.
  8. Nevada Family Court (Eighth and Second Judicial Districts): Divorce, custody, and family law proceedings in Las Vegas and Reno-Sparks. Eighth Judicial District Family Court is one of the busiest divorce courts in the U.S. given Nevada’s permissive residency requirements for divorce.
  9. Federal District Court of Nevada: Nevada operates as a single federal district covering the entire state plus the U.S. Bankruptcy Court. PACER queries reveal pending federal litigation, bankruptcy filings, IRS tax liens, and federal civil cases including gaming-related disputes and complex commercial litigation.
  10. U.S. Coast Guard and FAA Registry: USCG vessel documentation (Lake Mead, Lake Tahoe). FAA aircraft registry with major Las Vegas (Harry Reid International, North Las Vegas, Henderson Executive) and Reno (Reno-Tahoe International, Reno-Stead) hubs. Nevada is a popular state for aircraft ownership through single-purpose LLCs.

Nevada Judgment Enforcement Procedures Under NRS Chapter 21

NV Statute Enforcement Procedure Asset Search Application
NRS § 17.150 (Judgment Lien)Abstract of judgment recording creates real property lienIdentifies counties where debtor owns property for recording
NRS § 17.214 (Lien Duration)Judgment liens valid for six years (renewable)Timeline tracking for lien renewal strategy
NRS § 21.010 et seq. (Execution)Writ of execution against non-exempt personal propertyIdentifies vehicles, equipment, business interests for levy
NRS § 21.080 (Real Property Levy)Sheriff’s levy and sale of real propertyIdentifies real property suitable for forced sale
NRS § 31.249 (Garnishment)Garnishment of wages and intangible propertyIdentifies employer associations and third-party holders
NRS § 21.270 (Debtor Examination)Order to appear for examination of judgment debtorAsset search informs targeted examination questions
NRS § 86.401 (LLC Charging Orders)Charging order is EXCLUSIVE remedy against LLC interestsIdentifies LLC memberships; Nevada’s charging-order primacy is uniquely strong
NRS § 88.535 (LP Charging Orders)Charging order primacy extends to limited partnershipsIdentifies LP interests with similar protection
NRS Chapter 112 (Nevada UVTA)Nevada UVTA voiding actionsTimeline analysis identifies UVTA-actionable transfers
NRS § 17.330-§ 17.400 (Sister-State)Domestication of foreign judgments under UEFJAPre-domestication asset picture supports filing strategy

Nevada Community Property and Divorce Asset Discovery Under NRS Chapter 125

Family Code Concern Asset Search Findings Community Property Impact
Community property identification All property acquired during marriage in Nevada or elsewhere Equal division presumption under NRS § 125.150
Separate property tracing Acquisition dates support pre-marital, gift, and inheritance classification Excluded from community estate under NRS § 123.130
Quasi-community property Out-of-state property acquired before Nevada domicile Treated as community in Nevada divorce under NRS § 125.150
Hidden assets in spouse’s name Cross-reference spouse name across all 17 NV counties + nationwide Adds undisclosed property to community estate
Nevada asset protection trust holdings NV SOS + recorder + Nevada Spendthrift Trust Act analysis Trust assets characterization · NRS § 166 protections
Business interests producing income Officer/member roles in NV and other state LLCs Imputed income · community business valuation
Pre-action transfers to family NV recorder filings vs filing date timeline Nevada UVTA voiding · breach of fiduciary duty
Tahoe and Mesquite vacation property Douglas County (Stateline), Mineral County, Lincoln County records High-value second residence inclusion

How U.S. Asset Records Performs Nevada Asset Searches · 6 Step Methodology

  1. Step 1 – Build the Complete Subject Profile: Provide the subject’s full legal name, all known aliases or prior married names, last 5+ known Nevada and out-of-state addresses, date of birth (if available), spouse name (essential for community property analysis), and any known business affiliations or Nevada entity names.
  2. Step 2 – Map the Associated Party Network: Document spouse, parents, adult children, siblings, business partners, and known close associates. Nevada is a major asset protection jurisdiction; subjects nationwide hold Nevada LLCs, Nevada Asset Protection Trusts (NRS Chapter 166), and Nevada business structures. Network mapping is critical regardless of subject’s residency.
  3. Step 3 – Clark County and Statewide Sweep: A licensed analyst queries Clark County Recorder (Las Vegas, Henderson, Boulder City) and Washoe County Recorder (Reno-Sparks) as the dominant property markets. All 15 other Nevada counties are also reviewed. Las Vegas Strip and Henderson high-value residential are particular concentration points.
  4. Step 4 – Nevada Secretary of State Cross-Reference: All Nevada LLCs, corporations, series LLCs, business trusts, and limited partnerships where the subject appears as member, officer, manager, or registered agent are catalogued. UCC Article 9 filings centralized at the NV SOS are reviewed. Nevada’s strong privacy protections require thorough entity-level research.
  5. Step 5 – Nationwide Cross-Reference Beyond Nevada: Subjects with Nevada entities often own property in California (Lake Tahoe, San Diego, Los Angeles), Arizona (Phoenix, Sedona, Lake Havasu), Utah (St. George), Idaho, and Florida. Nationwide sweep ensures out-of-state holdings are not missed. Coast Guard documentation, FAA aircraft registry, and federal court records complete the picture.
  6. Step 6 – Deliver Source-Attributed Nevada Report: Professionally documented PDF report identifying every finding with full attribution: Clark or Washoe County document/instrument number, NV SOS entity ID, NV DMV plate registration, federal court PACER citation. Findings organized for direct use in Nevada District Court, Family Court, federal court, and probate proceedings.

Who Orders Nevada Asset Searches

  1. Las Vegas and Clark County family law attorneys: Community property division under NRS § 125.150 requires complete asset identification. High-net-worth divorces in Summerlin, Henderson, Lake Las Vegas, and The Ridges frequently involve concealment through Nevada LLCs, Nevada Asset Protection Trusts, and California cross-border property.
  2. Reno-Sparks divorce counsel: Washoe County family law involving Lake Tahoe waterfront, tech sector equity compensation (Tesla, Apple, Microsoft Northern Nevada operations), and California cross-border concealment patterns.
  3. Out-of-state counsel investigating Nevada entities: Subjects nationwide hold Nevada LLCs for asset protection, tax purposes, and privacy. Out-of-state attorneys frequently order Nevada-specific searches even when the case is in another jurisdiction. This is one of Nevada’s largest asset search use cases.
  4. Nevada collection law firms: Post-judgment enforcement under NRS Chapter 21. Abstract of judgment recording in Clark, Washoe, and other property-owning counties. Garnishment under NRS § 31.249.
  5. Nevada commercial litigation counsel: Pre-litigation collectibility evaluation in Nevada District Court Business Court. Defendant asset picture for gaming sector disputes, tech sector litigation, and tourism-industry commercial cases.
  6. Nevada probate attorneys: Decedent asset identification under NRS Chapters 132-156. Out-of-state holdings triggering ancillary administration in California, Arizona, and Utah. Nevada Spendthrift Trust analysis in estate contexts.
  7. Asset protection investigators and creditor counsel: Identifying assets held through Nevada Asset Protection Trusts (NAPTs) under NRS Chapter 166. Documenting transfers to NAPTs for fraudulent transfer analysis. Pre-trust period asset baseline for UVTA reach-back analysis.
  8. Federal court counsel (District of Nevada): Civil RICO predicate documentation, federal fraudulent transfer (11 U.S.C. § 548), bankruptcy-related asset tracing, and complex commercial litigation in the single Nevada federal district.
  9. Fraud examiners and gaming compliance investigators: Asset tracing in Nevada financial fraud, gaming industry compliance, and breach of fiduciary duty matters. Coordination with Nevada Gaming Control Board and federal investigations.
  10. Out-of-state attorneys with NV enforcement needs: Sister-state judgment domestication under NRS § 17.330-§ 17.400 (Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act) for enforcement against Nevada-located assets and Nevada entities.

Nevada Homestead, Asset Protection, and the Charging Order Primacy Doctrine

Exemption / Protection NV Statutory Reference Practical Impact on Recovery
Homestead exemptionNRS § 115.010 – approximately $605,000 (periodically adjusted)Among the highest in the U.S.; substantial protection for primary residence
Declaration of HomesteadNRS § 115.020 – recorded declaration confirms protectionBest practice is recording; protection generally automatic
Motor vehicle exemptionNRS § 21.090(1)(f) – approximately $15,000 per vehicleSubstantial vehicle protection
Wage garnishment capNRS § 31.295 – 25% disposable earnings (CCPA formula)Standard CCPA-based formula
LLC charging order primacyNRS § 86.401 – charging order is EXCLUSIVE remedyCreditor cannot reach LLC assets; can only attach distributions
Single-member LLC charging orderNRS § 86.401 – applies to single-member LLCs (uniquely strong)Even single-member LLCs receive charging order primacy
Nevada Asset Protection Trust (NAPT)NRS Chapter 166 – self-settled spendthrift trustTwo-year statutory lookback for transfers to NAPT
Retirement accountsNRS § 21.090(1)(r) – retirement plans broadly exemptERISA, 401(k), IRA accounts largely unreachable

Critical Nevada Note: Nevada is uniquely important in asset investigations because of (a) its high homestead exemption (~$605,000), (b) its charging-order primacy doctrine making LLC interests difficult to reach, (c) Nevada Asset Protection Trusts (NAPTs) with strong creditor-protection features, and (d) extensive use of Nevada entities by out-of-state subjects. Even when the subject is not a Nevada resident, Nevada Secretary of State research is often essential because Nevada is one of the most popular states for asset-shielding entity formation. Asset search findings combined with Nevada-specific exemption and entity analysis give a realistic recovery picture.

Nevada Uniform Voidable Transactions Act Under NRS Chapter 112

  1. Nevada adopted the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act: Nevada’s UVTA (formerly UFTA) is codified at NRS Chapter 112 (§ 112.140 through § 112.250), governing voiding of fraudulent transfers and obligations in Nevada.
  2. Actual fraud reach-back is four years under NRS § 112.230: Claims based on actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud must generally be brought within four years of the transfer, or one year after the transfer could reasonably have been discovered, whichever is later.
  3. Nevada Asset Protection Trust two-year lookback (NRS § 166.170): Transfers to a Nevada Spendthrift Trust receive special two-year statutory lookback protection under NRS § 166.170, shorter than the general UVTA four-year period. This is a uniquely strong Nevada feature.
  4. Constructive fraud (no intent required): NRS § 112.180 and § 112.190 void transfers made for less than reasonably equivalent value when the transferor was insolvent or thereby rendered insolvent. No proof of intent required.
  5. Eleven badges of fraud under NRS § 112.180(2): Listed badges include transfers to insiders, retention of possession, undisclosed transfers, transfers before significant debts, transfers of substantially all assets, absconding, removal of assets, concealment, less than reasonably equivalent value, insolvency at time of transfer, and unusual timing relative to litigation.
  6. Insiders defined broadly under NRS § 112.150: Includes spouses, family relatives, controlled entities, partners, directors, officers, and persons in control of the transferor. Transfers to insiders are presumed problematic.
  7. Federal bankruptcy parallels Nevada UVTA: Section 548 of the federal Bankruptcy Code provides federal remedies with a 2-year lookback, but Section 544(b) incorporates Nevada’s longer reach-back via the strong-arm clause when a Nevada bankruptcy trustee uses Nevada state law.
  8. Transferee liability under NRS § 112.220: Recipients of fraudulent transfers may be liable for the value of the transferred asset, with certain good-faith and value defenses available. Subsequent transferees may also have liability.

About this answer: This information describes the Nevada Asset Search service provided by U.S. Asset Records, a licensed asset investigation firm operating since 2018 serving law firms in Las Vegas, Reno, and out-of-state counsel investigating Nevada entities and Nevada trusts. Service details, pricing, and methodology are verifiable through the published service catalog at usassetrecords.com. All searches comply with FCRA, GLBA, DPPA, and FDCPA federal frameworks. Investigation is conducted from public records and licensed databases only; subjects are never contacted. References to NRS Chapter 21 (judgment enforcement), NRS Chapter 125 (community property), NRS Chapters 132-156 (probate), NRS Chapter 112 (Nevada UVTA), NRS Chapter 166 (Nevada Spendthrift Trusts / NAPTs), and specific exemption amounts are subject to legislative amendment; consult current Nevada statutes and local Nevada counsel regarding case-specific procedure and current exemption values. Last reviewed: November 2026.

Citation format: U.S. Asset Records. (2026). Nevada Asset Search – Litigation and Enforcement Investigation Across All 17 NV Counties. Retrieved from https://usassetrecords.com/nevada-asset-search/

Last reviewed and updated: June 2026 · U.S. Asset Records editorial team

Why Nevada Attorneys Choose U.S. Asset Records

How does U.S. Asset Records compare to other Nevada asset search companies?

U.S. Asset Records differs from traditional Nevada private-investigator asset search firms in three measurable ways: transparent flat-fee pricing ($125 per Asset Profile Report versus consultation-gated quotes), documented Nevada-specific legal grounding (NRS Chapter 21, homestead and exemption analysis, and county-level recording detail), and 24-to-48-hour delivery across all 17 counties. Many Nevada asset search providers lead with bank-account-search marketing but provide little state-specific procedural depth and require a phone consultation before disclosing price. U.S. Asset Records publishes pricing, methodology, and Nevada enforcement procedure openly, and delivers source-attributed findings suitable for Nevada District Courts and federal filings.

Factor U.S. Asset Records Typical Nevada PI Asset Search Firm
Pricing transparency$125 flat-fee, publishedConsultation-gated; quote after call
Nevada statutory groundingNRS Chapter 21 mapped to procedureGeneric “we find hidden assets” copy
County coverage detailAll 17 countiesRarely specified
Homestead/exemption analysisDocumented per Nevada lawUsually omitted
Turnaround24 to 48 hours5 to 14 days typical
Source attributionEvery finding documentedVariable
FCRA / GLBA / DPPA complianceBuilt in, explained openlyAsserted, rarely detailed
No-hit refundFull refund if no assets foundRare

Nevada County-Level Asset Search Coverage

U.S. Asset Records queries County Recorder real property records in every Nevada county, not only the major metros. High-value markets receive document-level review while every other county is swept for real property, recorded judgments, and lien filings. Priority Nevada markets include Clark (Las Vegas) and Washoe (Reno).

  1. Metro concentration: Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno-Sparks represent the bulk of high-net-worth Nevada asset concealment activity and receive document-level review.
  2. Full statewide sweep: All 17 counties are queried so out-of-metro real property and rural holdings are never missed.
  3. Recording source: County Recorder real property records are the authoritative Nevada real property record and are queried under subject and spouse names plus known entities.
  4. Court records: Nevada District Courts civil judgments, liens, and lis pendens filings are cross-referenced for existing creditor exposure.

Nevada Bank Account Searches: What Is Actually Legal

Many Nevada asset search advertisements lead with “bank account searches.” Here is the accurate legal position: bank account information is protected by the federal Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA). Bank account locates are lawful only for permissible-purpose users, principally FCRA-compliant collection of an existing judgment, and are not available for general pre-litigation or personal use. U.S. Asset Records provides bank account locates only within GLBA permissible-purpose limits as part of FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status work, and is transparent about when they are and are not available. Most Nevada matters are resolved through real property, business interests, vehicles, and recorded judgments, which an Asset Profile Report identifies in full at $125.

Nevada Asset Search · Frequently Asked Questions

  1. How much does a Nevada asset search cost? A Nevada asset search from U.S. Asset Records is $125 flat-fee for the Asset Profile Report or $250 for the FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status Profile. Pricing is published, not consultation-gated.
  2. How long does a Nevada asset search take? Standard delivery is 24 to 48 hours statewide. Same-day rush is available for hearings and trial deadlines.
  3. Does a Nevada asset search cover all counties? Yes. Every search covers all 17 counties plus nationwide cross-reference, not just Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno-Sparks.
  4. Can you find a Nevada debtor’s bank accounts? Bank account locates are limited by the GLBA to FCRA-compliant collection of an existing judgment. Real property, business interests, vehicles, and judgments are identified in every Asset Profile Report.
  5. What Nevada law governs judgment enforcement? NRS Chapter 21 governs Nevada judgment enforcement. Nevada charging-order primacy (NRS 86.401, including single-member LLCs) and Nevada Asset Protection Trusts (NRS Chapter 166) require entity-level analysis that out-of-state counsel frequently order even when the case is elsewhere.
  6. Is the Nevada subject notified? No. Investigations are conducted from public records and licensed databases only; the subject is never contacted.

Authoritative Sources & Nevada Legal References

This Nevada asset search guide references the following authoritative public and legal sources. U.S. Asset Records conducts all investigations in compliance with federal law.

  • ▸ Nevada Secretary of State — business entity and UCC filings (nvsos.gov)
  • ▸ Nevada Courts — civil judgments and court records (nvcourts.gov)
  • ▸ NRS Chapter 21 — Nevada judgment enforcement statute
  • ▸ U.S. Federal Trade Commission — Fair Credit Reporting Act (ftc.gov)
  • ▸ Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (consumerfinance.gov)
  • ▸ U.S. Coast Guard National Vessel Documentation Center — vessel ownership
  • ▸ Federal Aviation Administration Aircraft Registry — aircraft ownership

“U.S. Asset Records has become our go-to resource for judgment collection support. Their reports are thorough, accurate, and have helped us recover millions in outstanding judgments.”

Michael R., Esq. | Collections Attorney, Miami FL
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Nevada Investigation

What a Nevada Asset Search Covers

  • Nevada real property in all 17 counties with assessed values, mortgage positions, and equity estimates
  • Nevada vehicle records through the state motor vehicle agency
  • Nevada Secretary of State business filings including corporations, LLCs, and partnerships
  • Nevada UCC filings through the Secretary of State
  • Nevada court records from state and federal courts
  • Federal and state tax liens filed in Nevada counties
  • Watercraft and aircraft registered in Nevada

Nevada: Privacy-Friendly Entity Formation and Asset Protection

Indeed, Nevada is one of the top states for asset concealment through entity structures. Nevada LLCs offer strong charging order protections (making it difficult for creditors to reach assets inside the LLC), no state income tax, no franchise tax on LLCs, and relatively private formation requirements. Individuals and businesses across the country form Nevada entities specifically to hold assets. Our investigation traces entity connections between Nevada LLCs and assets held in other states.

Nevada Judgment Enforcement and Community Property

Furthermore, Nevada is a community property state, which affects divorce proceedings and judgment enforcement. Community property may be reachable for one spouse’s debts in certain circumstances. Nevada provides wage garnishment (25% of disposable earnings), bank levies, and judgment liens. The Nevada Courts system provides execution and garnishment procedures through district court.

Las Vegas Real Estate and Gaming Industry Assets

Additionally, the Las Vegas metro area (Clark County) represents the vast majority of Nevada’s economic activity. Real estate, business interests tied to the gaming and hospitality industry, and luxury personal property are all significant asset categories. Many subjects hold investment properties, timeshares, and commercial real estate in the Las Vegas corridor.

Our Nevada asset search supports divorce proceedings, pre-litigation evaluation, estate administration, due diligence, and business investigation. For attorneys, see our law firm services. Learn about what sets us apart and review our professional methodology.

“We use U.S. Asset Records for pre-litigation assessment on every significant case. Their asset searches help us advise clients on the viability of pursuing claims.”

David S., Esq. | Commercial Litigation Partner, New York NY

Every day you wait is a day assets can be transferred, retitled, or concealed. Order your search now before the financial picture changes.

DIY County-by-County Search

Must know which counties to search. Misses out-of-state property. Cannot trace entity connections. No equity calculations. Takes weeks.

Professional Search ($125)

All counties + all 50 states simultaneously. Entity tracing. Equity calculations. Transfer analysis. Analyst notes. 24-48 hours.

Your Report

What’s Included in Your Nevada Asset Search Report

Our Nevada asset search covers every major asset category across all 17 counties plus nationwide.

  • Real property with assessed values, mortgage balances, lien positions, and net equity calculations
  • Vehicles, watercraft, and aircraft with registration status and lien information
  • Business entities with officer positions, registered agents, and filing status
  • UCC filings showing secured collateral, equipment, inventory, and receivables
  • Federal and state tax liens with amounts and priority positions
  • Judgment liens from other creditors competing for the same assets
  • Civil litigation history and bankruptcy filings
  • Property transfer analysis documenting suspicious conveyances
  • Analyst notes with strategic observations and enforcement recommendations
  • Free consultation to discuss findings and next steps

Nevada Charging Order Limitations for Creditors

Nevada’s LLC charging order protection under NRS 86.401 makes it the exclusive remedy for creditors against multi-member LLC interests. This means creditors cannot force liquidation, cannot seize the membership interest, and can only receive distributions if and when the LLC chooses to make them. Understanding this limitation is critical: if a debtor holds assets inside a Nevada LLC, traditional enforcement tools may be insufficient. Our hidden asset investigation identifies which assets are held inside entities versus personally, allowing your attorney to develop strategies around the charging order limitation.

Nevada Gaming Industry and Luxury Asset Categories

Nevada’s gaming and hospitality industry creates unique asset categories. Casino industry executives may hold equity positions, deferred compensation, and gaming license interests with substantial value. Las Vegas luxury assets include high-value vehicles (exotic cars are common), jewelry, art collections, and luxury condominiums on The Strip. The Reno-Tahoe corridor has significant vacation and investment property. Additionally, Nevada’s growing lithium mining and renewable energy sectors (the Tesla Gigafactory near Reno is the largest building in the world by footprint) create industrial asset categories including mining claims, mineral rights, and commercial real estate.

“In divorce cases, finding undisclosed assets can make or break equitable distribution. U.S. Asset Records has helped my clients uncover property, vehicles, and business interests that spouses attempted to conceal.”

Lisa H., Esq. | Family Law Attorney, Phoenix AZ
Regional Coverage

Nevada Asset Search by Region

Las Vegas / Clark County

Over 70% of Nevada’s population. The Strip, Henderson, Summerlin, North Las Vegas. Casino/hospitality industry assets, luxury real estate, investment properties, timeshares, and commercial real estate. The Clark County Assessor maintains comprehensive property records.

Reno / Washoe County

Reno, Sparks, and surrounding communities. Growing tech sector (Tesla Gigafactory, data centers), gaming industry, divorce capital history, and Lake Tahoe luxury property. Significant recent population growth from California transplants.

Rural Nevada

Elko, Lyon, Douglas, Carson City, and 12 other counties. Mining industry assets (gold, silver, lithium), ranching land, and rural real estate. Mineral rights are a significant and often overlooked asset category in rural Nevada.

Nevada as an Asset Protection Jurisdiction

Nevada is not just a state where people live. It is a jurisdiction where people across the country hide assets. The Nevada Secretary of State registers thousands of LLCs annually from out-of-state individuals seeking Nevada’s strong charging order protection, lack of state income tax, and entity privacy provisions. Under NRS Chapter 86, a charging order is the exclusive remedy for a creditor against a multi-member LLC, making it extremely difficult to seize assets held inside Nevada entities. Our investigation traces these entity connections between Nevada LLCs and assets held anywhere in the country.

Nevada Spendthrift Trust Protection

Furthermore, Nevada is one of the top domestic asset protection trust jurisdictions. NRS Chapter 166 allows self-settled spendthrift trusts that protect assets from future creditors after a two-year lookback period. Subjects who have established Nevada asset protection trusts may appear to have no personal assets while actually controlling significant wealth through trust structures. Our investigation identifies trust connections through entity filings and property records.

Nevada Divorce and Community Property

Nevada’s status as a community property state combined with its easy residency requirements (six weeks) makes it a popular divorce jurisdiction. Assets acquired during marriage are community property subject to equal division. Our divorce asset search identifies undisclosed community assets including property, vehicles, business interests, and assets held through Nevada entities.

FAQ

Nevada Asset Search: Frequently Asked Questions

Why is Nevada important for asset searches?

Nevada is a top state for asset concealment through LLC formation. Strong charging order protections and privacy provisions make Nevada entities popular for hiding assets. Our investigation traces these structures.

Do you cover all 17 Nevada counties?

Yes. Clark County (Las Vegas), Washoe County (Reno), and all 15 other counties searched simultaneously.

Is Nevada a community property state?

Yes. Assets acquired during marriage are community property. This affects both divorce proceedings and judgment enforcement.

Can you find assets hidden in Nevada LLCs?

Yes. Our business asset search traces entity connections through the Nevada Secretary of State and cross-references with all 49 other states.

How much does a Nevada asset search cost?

Flat-fee: $125 public report or $250 certified creditor report. Skip trace $75. All 17 Nevada counties plus nationwide.

What is a Nevada charging order and how does it affect collections?

Under NRS 86.401, a charging order is the exclusive remedy against a multi-member Nevada LLC. Creditors cannot force liquidation or seize the interest directly. Our reports identify which assets are inside entities versus held personally.

Can you find assets held in Nevada asset protection trusts?

Yes. Our investigation identifies trust connections through entity filings and property records. Self-settled spendthrift trusts under NRS Chapter 166 have a two-year lookback period. Transfers into these trusts during that window may be voidable.

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Asset investigations and recovery are two sides of the same workflow. The asset investigations and recovery process starts with locating assets and ends with documented enforcement support. We handle both phases under a single flat fee.

Licensed Asset Investigator

Every U.S. Asset Records report is conducted by a licensed asset investigator with decades of experience. Our asset investigator team works exclusively with attorneys, law firms, collection agencies, and creditors. No DIY databases — only licensed asset investigator workflows.

Asset Protection Investigator

An asset protection investigator examines fraudulent transfer schemes, nominee structures, and offshore concealment used to thwart legitimate creditors. Our asset protection investigator team specializes in piercing asset protection plans during divorce, judgment enforcement, and fraud investigations.

Ready to start your asset search, asset investigation, or asset recovery investigation? Order online — flat fee from $75, 24-48 hour delivery, all 50 states.

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U.S. Asset Records · The Nationwide Authority on Asset Search and Investigation

When you need professional assets search services, asset investigations, or asset recovery investigation support, U.S. Asset Records delivers verified, source-attributed reports in 24 to 48 hours at flat-fee pricing of $75 to $250. We are the trusted asset investigator for 500+ law firms and the recognized asset protection investigator for collection agencies, divorce litigants, probate administrators, and fraud examiners nationwide.

Professional Asset Searches and Investigation

Our nationwide asset searches identify every property, vehicle, business interest, and recorded encumbrance owned by an individual or entity. Whether you need asset searching for litigation discovery or comprehensive asset investigations for judgment recovery, our licensed analysts deliver complete coverage across all 50 U.S. states.

Asset Recovery Services and Investigation

Specialized asset recovery services support judgment creditors, collection professionals, and fraud victims. Each asset recovery investigation documents the assets, transfers, and concealment structures needed for civil RICO claims, fraudulent transfer recovery, and judgment enforcement. Our asset investigations and recovery workflow integrates skip trace, asset locate, and lien priority analysis.

Search for Unclaimed Assets

When you need a search for unclaimed assets on behalf of an estate, heir, or beneficiary, our unclaimed asset search service cross-references state treasurer escheat databases, dormant account indicators, and out-of-state holdings. Recover what state holdings have absorbed under escheat statutes without paying heir hunter contingency fees.

Licensed Asset Investigator Network

As an established asset investigator serving 500+ law firms since 2018, U.S. Asset Records combines licensed database access, federal privacy compliance, and source-attributed reporting that distinguishes professional asset investigations from consumer-grade tools. Our asset protection investigator services support both pre-litigation and post-judgment workflows.

Note on free asset searches: While many consumer tools advertise “free asset searches,” these tools generally lack the licensed database access, multi-source cross-verification, and source attribution required for legal use. Professional asset searches at flat-fee pricing of $75 to $250 are the standard for any litigation, collection, divorce, probate, or fraud investigation matter where the findings must be reliable and admissible.

Ready to order? Place your asset search online in 2-3 minutes. No contracts, no subscriptions, no minimums. Flat-fee pricing from $75 (Skip Trace) to $250 (FCRA-compliant Creditor-Status Profile). Same-day rush delivery available.