District of Columbia
District of Columbia Death Records: Are They Public?

The District of Columbia is a closed-record jurisdiction for death certificates. Only the decedent's family, the informant, the person controlling final disposition, and legal representatives may buy a certified copy. A DC death record becomes a public record 75 years after the date of death.
Are Death Records Public in the District of Columbia?
No. The District of Columbia is a closed-record jurisdiction for recent deaths. Certified death certificates are released only to people on a defined eligibility list, not to the general public.
Under D.C. Code 7-231.24(i), a death record is considered open once 75 years have elapsed from the date of death. Until that point, the record stays confidential and certified copies are restricted to family members and authorized parties.
This is stricter than open-record jurisdictions where anyone can buy a certified copy. The DC Vital Records Division, part of DC Health, limits access to protect the privacy of decedents and their families.
There is no federal death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death certificates are issued and held by each state or jurisdiction, so District of Columbia records must come from DC Health.
Who Can Request a District of Columbia Death Record?
Only people with a direct relationship to the decedent or a legal reason may obtain a certified copy. D.C. Code 7-231.25(e)(3) sets the eligibility list.

Those entitled to a certified copy include:
- The informant named on the death record
- The decedent's spouse or domestic partner
- The decedent's child, parent, or sibling
- A grandparent or grandchild
- Next of kin as specified by probate or other law
- The individual with the right to control final disposition of the body
- The decedent's legal guardian immediately before death
- The decedent's legal representative
A funeral director from the funeral establishment named on the record may also obtain a certified copy for 30 days after the record is filed. An interested party who can document a tangible legal interest may qualify as well.
Every applicant must present valid identification. DC Health accepts one primary photo ID, such as a driver's license, passport, or military ID, or two forms of alternate identification showing your full name and address. Applicants who are not the parent, spouse, or informant may need certified records proving their relationship.
How to Get a District of Columbia Death Certificate
Order certified copies from the DC Vital Records Division, the office within DC Health that maintains the District's vital records. The division is located at 2201 Shannon Place SE, Washington, DC 20020, and can be reached at (202) 442-9303.
Each certified copy costs $18.00, a fee that includes the search of the record. Each additional copy ordered at the same time is also $18.00. Checks and money orders should be made payable to the DC Treasurer; cash is not accepted and fees are not refundable.
You can request a death certificate several ways:
- Online through the District's authorized vendor
- By mail using the death certificate application with a copy of your photo ID
- In person at the Shannon Place office during walk-up hours, including automated kiosks
- By phone through the authorized ordering line
Walk-up hours are limited (generally mornings most weekdays, with later Wednesday hours), so confirm the current schedule before visiting. Mail and online processing times vary with volume, so order well ahead of any probate, insurance, or benefits deadline.
For related records, see Are Birth Certificates Public Records? for how DC treats birth records, which open after 125 years.
Is the Cause of Death Public in the District of Columbia?
No. The cause of death is printed on the certified District of Columbia death certificate, and that certificate is released only to eligible requesters. The general public cannot obtain the cause of death for a recent death.

Because DC issues a single certified certificate rather than separate confidential and informational versions, the medical cause-of-death information carries the same access restriction as the rest of the record. Only the family members, disposition authority, and legal representatives listed in the statute can receive it.
Once a record opens to the public 75 years after death, the full certificate, including cause of death, becomes available. For broader context on how jurisdictions handle this, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?, which are governed by separate medical examiner rules.
How Far Back Do District of Columbia Death Records Go?
The DC Vital Records Division maintains death records dating back to August 1874. Recent records require proof of eligibility, while records older than 75 years are open to the public as historical documents.
For genealogy and older deaths, the National Archives and the District's historical record collections hold indexes and certificates that have passed into the public domain. These open records are commonly used by researchers tracing family history.
On the national side, the Social Security Administration maintains a public Death Master File, but under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 it excludes deaths that occurred within the most recent three calendar years. The SSA file lists the fact of death only and is never a substitute for a certified DC death certificate.
For the rules in every other jurisdiction, see Death Records by State.
District of Columbia Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | District of Columbia answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed for recent deaths |
| When do records become public? | 75 years after the date of death |
| Who can request a certified copy? | Informant, spouse/domestic partner, child, parent, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, next of kin, disposition authority, legal guardian, legal representative |
| Fee per certified copy | $18.00 (includes search) |
| Issuing office | DC Vital Records Division, DC Health |
| Governing statute | D.C. Code 7-231.24 and 7-231.25 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about access to District of Columbia death records, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and procedures change. Always confirm current requirements with the DC Vital Records Division before ordering.
Sources
This article relies on official District of Columbia government sources, including DC Health's Vital Records Division and the D.C. Code, along with federal references from the CDC and the Social Security Administration; full citations are listed below.
Sources and References
- DC Health, DC Vital Records Division - Death Certificates(dchealth.dc.gov).gov
- D.C. Code 7-231.24 - Vital records open to the public (75 years for death records)(code.dccouncil.gov).gov
- D.C. Code 7-231.25 - Certification from the system of vital statistics (eligibility)(code.dccouncil.gov).gov
- DC Health, Vital Records Fee Schedule(dchealth.dc.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records, District of Columbia(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File / Limited Access (Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013)(ssa.gov).gov