District of Columbia
How to Get a District of Columbia Death Certificate (2026)

You get a District of Columbia death certificate from the DC Health Vital Records Division. Certified copies cost $18.00 each and are issued only to eligible family members or people with a documented interest. You can order online, by mail, by phone, or in person.
How Do You Get a Death Certificate in District of Columbia?
You get a District of Columbia death certificate from the DC Health Vital Records Division (DCVRD), the central office that maintains death records for deaths that occurred in the District. The District does not use county registrars, so all requests go through this single office.
DCVRD offers four main ways to request a certificate. You can order online through the District's authorized vendor, VitalChek. You can order by phone, by mail using the death certificate application, or in person at an automated self-service kiosk.
Each method requires the decedent's full name, the date and place of death, your relationship to the decedent, the reason for your request, and a valid photo ID. The $18.00 fee applies regardless of which method you choose.
Order Online, by Phone, by Mail, or in Person
Online and phone orders are placed through VitalChek, the District's remote ordering service. Both the agency certificate fee and the VitalChek processing fee are non-refundable.
Mail requests use the official DC death certificate application, which you send with a copy of your valid ID and payment to the Vital Records office. In-person service is available through automated kiosks at the DC Health location.
Who Is Eligible to Request a District of Columbia Death Certificate?
Eligibility for a District of Columbia death certificate is limited to people with a legal or familial connection to the decedent. DC death records are closed, so the office must verify your relationship and your reason for requesting the record before it releases a certified copy.

The following people may obtain a certified copy:
- The spouse or domestic partner named in connection with the certificate
- A parent of the decedent
- An adult child, grandchild, or sibling (with proof such as a certified birth record)
- A grandparent (with supporting documentation)
- A legal guardian (with a court order) or a legal representative (with a retainer agreement and bar card)
- Law enforcement with a court subpoena
- An interested party who can show a documented tangible interest
By law, cousins, nieces and nephews, aunts and uncles, friends, neighbors, and others without a specific interest are not allowed to order an individual's death certificate. Death records become public after 75 years, after which anyone may request a copy of those older records.
District of Columbia Death Certificate Cost and Processing Time
A District of Columbia death certificate costs $18.00 per copy. Under DC law, this fee pays for the office to search the records and includes one copy of the certificate if the record is found. The fee is non-refundable, so if the record is not located you receive a Certificate of Search instead of a death certificate.
Processing typically takes about two to three weeks after you clear identity and entitlement verification and pay the fee. For remote orders placed online or by mail, allow roughly two to four weeks, plus shipping time based on the delivery method you select.
To avoid delays, make sure your application is complete, your photo ID is original and unexpired, and your payment is included. Online orders through VitalChek may offer expedited handling for an additional processing fee.
Certified vs Informational Copy in District of Columbia
The District of Columbia issues certified copies of death certificates. A certified copy carries the official seal and is accepted for legal and administrative tasks such as settling an estate, claiming life insurance, closing financial accounts, and transferring property or a vehicle title.

Unlike some states, DC does not provide informational (non-certified) copies to the general public. Because DC death records are closed, the office releases certified copies only to applicants who prove both their identity and their entitlement to the record.
If you only need to confirm details for genealogy and the death occurred more than 75 years ago, that record is public and you may request a copy without showing a family relationship.
How to Get Additional or Replacement Copies
You can order additional or replacement District of Columbia death certificates the same way you order the first one: online through VitalChek, by phone, by mail, or in person. Each copy is subject to the standard $18.00 fee.

If you lose a certified copy or need extra copies for different agencies, simply submit a new request with the decedent's information, your valid ID, and payment for the number of copies you need. There is no separate replacement process; a replacement is treated as a new certified-copy order.
Families often order several certified copies at once because banks, insurers, and government agencies usually each require their own original. Ordering the copies you expect to need together can save you a second request later.
| Item | District of Columbia |
|---|---|
| Issuing office | DC Health Vital Records Division (DCVRD) |
| First-copy fee | $18.00 (includes record search) |
| Each additional copy | $18.00 |
| Processing time | About 2 to 3 weeks (2 to 4 weeks for remote orders) |
| Eligibility | Spouse, domestic partner, parent, adult child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, legal guardian/representative, or person with a tangible interest |
Disclaimer: This page provides general information about obtaining a District of Columbia death certificate and is not legal advice. Fees, eligibility rules, and procedures can change. Always verify current details with the DC Health Vital Records Division before applying.
For more on access rules and who qualifies, see our overview of District of Columbia Death Records, or compare other states on our Death Records by State hub.
Sources
This page draws on the DC Health Vital Records Division death certificate service page, fee schedule, official application, and District of Columbia Code provisions on vital records fees.
Sources and References
- DC Health Vital Records Division - Death Certificates(dchealth.dc.gov).gov
- DC Vital Records Fee Schedule(dchealth.dc.gov).gov
- DC Vital Records - Important Notices(dchealth.dc.gov).gov
- District of Columbia Death Certificate Application(dchealth.dc.gov).gov
- DC Vital Records - Main Page(dchealth.dc.gov).gov