Georgia
Georgia Death Records: Are They Public and How to Get Them

Georgia is effectively an open-record state for death records. Any member of the public may order a Georgia death record and receive a plain-paper copy with the Social Security number redacted. Certified copies, and certified copies that show the cause of death, are restricted to family and applicants with a direct and tangible interest. There is no waiting period before basic death records become public.
Are Death Records Public in Georgia?
Yes. Georgia treats the fact of death as a public record. Any member of the public may order the death record of a person who died in Georgia and receive a plain-paper copy with the Social Security number redacted.
This is what makes Georgia an open-record state. You do not have to prove a family relationship to obtain a basic, non-certified copy of a Georgia death record.
There is no statutory waiting period. Unlike closed-record states that seal certificates for 25, 50, 75, or 100 years, Georgia death records are accessible to the public from the date they are filed.
State law draws the line at certified copies rather than at access itself. Official copies of death records remain accessible to the public, while certified copies carry eligibility limits. See Are Cause of Death Records Public? for how this open-versus-restricted split works in other states.
Who Can Request a Georgia Death Record?
Anyone can request a basic Georgia death record, but only certain people can receive a certified copy. The state separates public access from certified access.

Members of the public receive a plain-paper copy with the Social Security number redacted. This copy confirms the fact, date, and place of death.
Certified copies are available only to applicants who have a direct and tangible interest in the record. The Georgia Department of Public Health lists eligible requesters as:
- The legal spouse of the decedent
- Adult children
- Adult siblings
- Parents
- Grandparents and grandchildren
- A legal representative of the family
- A person with a tangible interest, such as a named beneficiary or an insurance company
To receive a certified copy, you must submit a valid government-issued photo ID, such as a Georgia driver's license or state ID card, along with the proper fee. Georgia law and Department of Public Health rules require the signature and photo ID of the requester.
How to Get a Georgia Death Certificate
You can order a Georgia death certificate online, by mail, or in person through the Georgia Department of Public Health, State Office of Vital Records. The state office holds death records from January 1, 1919 to the present.
The fee is $25.00 for the first certified copy, which includes a 3-year record search. Each additional copy ordered at the same time costs $5.00. Georgia law requires prepayment, and fees are non-refundable once a service has been provided.
Order online
Online orders are placed through the state's authorized vital records vendor. Expedited shipping is available for online orders for an additional fee. Online ordering is generally the fastest option.
Order by mail
Mail requests are submitted with a copy of your photo ID and the required fee. Mail orders to your county vital records office or to the State Office of Vital Records, 1680 Phoenix Boulevard, Suite 100, Atlanta, GA 30349. Regular mail orders are shipped up to 10 weeks after they are received.
Order in person
You can also visit a county vital records office or the state office in person. For emergency or urgent travel needs, the Department of Public Health directs requesters to their nearest vital records office.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Georgia?
The cause of death is restricted on certified copies in Georgia. A certified copy that contains the cause of death is issued only to the spouse, children, parents, or other next of kin of the decedent, or to other authorized persons under O.C.G.A. 31-10-26.

A certified copy or abstract that does not contain the cause of death may be issued to any applicant who submits a proper application. In short, the cause of death is the most protected field on the certificate.
This mirrors how many states handle medical detail. For related coverage, see Are Autopsies Public Records?, which explains how cause-of-death findings and autopsy reports are released separately from the death certificate itself.
How Far Back Do Georgia Death Records Go?
Georgia death records at the state level go back to January 1, 1919, when statewide death registration began. Before 1919, deaths were not recorded by the county or the state, though some cities recorded deaths earlier, including Savannah, Macon, and Atlanta.
Pre-1919 records, where they exist, are held at the county level or by the Georgia Archives rather than the State Office of Vital Records.
On a national level, there is no federal death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death records are issued and held by individual states, not the federal government.
For genealogical lookups, the Social Security Administration's public Death Master File is a separate national index. Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, the public version of that file excludes deaths that occurred within the previous three calendar years. For other state vital records, see Death Records by State and Are Birth Certificates Public Records?.
Georgia Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | Georgia answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Open record. The public can order plain-paper copies. |
| Waiting period before public? | None. Records are public from filing; state records date to 1919. |
| Who can get a certified copy? | Spouse, adult children, parents, siblings, grandparents, grandchildren, legal representative, or a tangible-interest party. |
| Is the cause of death restricted? | Yes. Certified copies with cause of death go only to next of kin or authorized persons. |
| Fee | $25 first certified copy (includes 3-year search); $5 each additional. |
| Issuing office | Georgia Department of Public Health, State Office of Vital Records. |
| Governing statute | O.C.G.A. Title 31, Chapter 10 (sections 31-10-25 and 31-10-26). |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in Georgia and is not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times change. Verify current requirements with the Georgia Department of Public Health, State Office of Vital Records, before you order.
Sources
This page is based on official guidance from the Georgia Department of Public Health, the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (O.C.G.A. Title 31, Chapter 10), the CDC National Center for Health Statistics, and the Social Security Administration, listed below.
Sources and References
- Georgia Department of Public Health, Ways to Request a Vital Record: Death(dph.georgia.gov).gov
- Georgia.gov, Order a Birth or Death Certificate(georgia.gov).gov
- O.C.G.A. Title 31, Chapter 10, Section 31-10-26 (Certified copies of vital records)(law.georgia.gov).gov
- Georgia Archives, Vital Records and Death Records(georgiaarchives.org).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics, Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration, Death Master File (Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013)(ssa.gov).gov