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Click on your state to view detailed FOIA guidance
Click on your state to view detailed FOIA guidance
Each state page includes: response deadlines, fee structures, special rights, exemptions, enforcement options, and success strategies
- Statute
- NDCC 44-04-18 et seq
- Year Enacted
- 1970 (amended 2024)
- Response Deadline
- 10 business days
- Who Can Request
- Anyone
- Fees
- Yes
- Attorney Fees
- Not recoverable
- Enforcement
- Multiple mechanisms
Last verified: February 18, 2026
Use North Dakota FOIA TemplateDefinition of Public Record
North Dakota law defines records as, “recorded information of any kind, regardless of the physical form or characteristic by which the information is stored, recorded, or reproduced, which is in the possession or custody of a public entity or its agent and which has been received or prepared for use in connection with public business or contains information relating to public business.”
Exemptions to Public Records
Exempt: Juvenile records; trade secrets; public employee medical and assistance records; workers compensation; unemployment; tax information; law enforcement investigation records; and most Department of Human Services records.
🔍 Search Common Exemptions
Exemption database for ND is being compiled. Check back soon!
Who Can Make a Request?
Anyone
Response Timeframe
No timeframe is specified.
📅 Calculate Your Response Deadline
Information on Fees
A public entity can charge for providing records, and may require payment of any estimated charges before fulfilling an open record request.
Enforcement Mechanisms
Any interested person may request an attorney general’s opinion to review a written denial of a request for records. N.D.C.C. § 44-04-21.1(1). If the attorney general issues a written opinion concluding that a violation has occurred, the public entity has seven days after the opinion is issued, regardless of whether a civil action is filed, to disclose the record. N.D.C.C. § 44-04-21.1(2). If the public entity fails to disclose the record within the seven-day period and the person requesting the opinion prevails in a civil action brought under N.D.C.C. § 44-04-21.2, the requestor must be awarded costs, disbursements, and reasonable attorney’s fees in the action and on appeal.
Attorney Fees
You can win attorney’s fees along with damages.
🚀 Ready to Request Records?
Choose how you want to proceed with your ND public records request:
💡 Both options provide comprehensive, well-formatted requests based on ND transparency law.