You can read the newly released “Epstein files” directly on official government sites and several large public archives that mirror or organize them.

Main official sources

  • U.S. Department of Justice “Epstein Library” – The Justice Department now hosts the bulk of files released under the Epstein Files Transparency Act on a dedicated section of its website, labeled as a library of materials responsive to that law. These include investigation records, photos, and other case documents, with a warning that some content describes sexual assault and may be disturbing.
  • House Oversight Committee release – The House Oversight Committee has posted tens of thousands of pages of Epstein‑related records it received from the DOJ, with links to download the full sets and backup mirrors. These are raw government productions, with victim identities and any illegal imagery redacted.

Big searchable archives

  • SearchTheFiles.com (Epstein Files) – A large searchable archive (over 10GB) of unsealed court documents, flight logs, arrest warrants, motions, appeals, and Epstein’s “Little Black Book,” presented as public‑domain or court‑access materials. It’s aimed at letting people search names, dates, and specific filings across the whole collection.
  • EpsteinDocs.info – A structured archive of officially released case files, flight logs, FBI Vault material, evidence lists, and other government releases, organized by “phases” of document releases for easier browsing. It emphasizes that all documents come from court or agency releases and are presented in original form.
  • Epstein Files Archive – An independent project indexing public court filings, FOIA releases, estate document dumps, and oversight records into a searchable archive with provenance tags, focusing on making primary‑source material easy to cite and verify.

Media & research tools

  • CBS News database – CBS is mirroring the DOJ releases into its own searchable database and links directly to the Justice Department data sets so readers can browse documents and images. This is a more media‑friendly front end on top of the official releases.
  • TheEpsteinIsland.com – A public research tool that lets you browse images extracted from released court documents, filter by person, and ask natural‑language questions about what’s in those records, with citations back to the underlying files.

Older document collections

  • Independent “Epstein document archives” – Several long‑running sites (for example, epsteinarchive‑style projects) host earlier releases like unredacted address books, depositions, federal indictments, and Maxwell‑case exhibits such as flight logs. Many of these also include FBI and “Phase 1” releases plus congressional oversight materials like emails and “birthday book” exhibits.

Important notes

  • These files contain detailed accounts and evidence of sexual abuse, trafficking, and related crimes, and can be extremely distressing to read.
  • Names in these archives can include victims, witnesses, and people never charged with crimes, so drawing conclusions about individuals from a name in a document can be misleading or unfair.