Georgia
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Georgia? (2026 Guide)

Georgia autopsy reports are generally public records under the Georgia Open Records Act, but only after the case is closed. While a death investigation is still pending, the report is withheld. Anyone may request a completed report, though next of kin pay no fee, and you ask the GBI Medical Examiner or the local county coroner.
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Georgia?
Yes. In Georgia a completed autopsy report is a public record under the Georgia Open Records Act, O.C.G.A. 50-18-70 and following. Once the medical examiner or coroner finalizes the cause and manner of death, the report is open to inspection and copying.
The major restriction is timing. While the death investigation is still open or pending, the report falls under the law enforcement and pending-investigation exemption and is not released. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) notes that a case stays "pending" when further research or testing, such as toxicology, is needed before the cause and manner of death can be determined.
Next of kin receive the report at no charge once it is complete. Other members of the public may request the same finalized report, but the agency may bill for copying and search costs before releasing it.
Who Performs Autopsies in Georgia?
Georgia runs a county-based death investigation system, and authority sits at the county level. Each county has either an elected coroner or an appointed county medical examiner. Above them, the state maintains a Chief Medical Examiner within the GBI Division of Forensic Sciences, which performs autopsies and oversees standards under O.C.G.A. 35-3-153.

When an Autopsy Happens
The Georgia Death Investigation Act requires that the coroner or county medical examiner be notified and that a medical examiner's inquiry be made when a death is sudden, violent, suspicious, or unexplained. Coroners, deputy coroners, and law enforcement report these cases to the GBI Medical Examiner's Office.
Whether an autopsy follows is largely discretionary. The GBI states that "the Medical Examiner's Office determines if an examination will be performed." One clear exception is set by statute: an autopsy is mandatory for the death of any child after birth but before age seven whose death is unexpected or unexplained, unless the inquiry shows the death was expected or explainable with a reasonable degree of medical certainty (O.C.G.A. 45-16-27).
A preliminary result may be available within 24 hours or at the completion of the autopsy, but the full written report, including toxicology, can take longer.
Who Can Request a Georgia Autopsy Report?
Once a report is finalized, any person may request it because it is an open record. You do not need to be related to the deceased to ask for a completed report.
Status does affect cost, not access. The GBI confirms "there is no charge to next of kin," so a spouse, parent, child, or other immediate family member receives the report for free. Other requesters, including researchers, journalists, attorneys, and the general public, may be billed for search and copying before the record is released.
The exception, again, is timing. No one, including next of kin, receives a report tied to a case that is still open or pending until the investigation closes.
How to Get an Autopsy or Toxicology Report in Georgia
You request a completed Georgia autopsy or toxicology report through the agency that handled the death, either the GBI Medical Examiner or the local county coroner.

For GBI cases, submit an Open Records Act request to the GBI Open Records Unit, Georgia Bureau of Investigation, 3121 Panthersville Road, Decatur, GA 30034, or call 404-270-8527. Include the date of the death, the Georgia county or city where it occurred, the name of the deceased, and your contact information.
If a local county coroner or county medical examiner handled the case, contact that county office directly, since many counties sell autopsy reports through their own coroner's office.
On fees, the GBI states that "all records requests are subject to the Georgia Open Records Act and may result in the requestor being billed for the requested information before the records are released." Next of kin are not charged.
On timing, expect a hold if the case is still pending. The GBI issues the report once the cause and manner of death are finalized, which can wait on additional testing such as toxicology; a report cannot be issued until that testing is complete. Where an autopsy is also part of an active criminal investigation, it may stay withheld under the pending-investigation exemption until that case concludes.
Autopsy Report vs Death Certificate in Georgia
An autopsy report and a death certificate are two different documents. The death certificate is the legal vital record issued by the Georgia Department of Public Health that lists the immediate cause-of-death line, plus identity, date, and place of death. It is used for estates, insurance, and benefits.
The autopsy report is the medical examiner's or coroner's detailed examination, often dozens of pages, describing findings, toxicology, and the basis for the manner of death. It explains how the office reached the conclusion that appears as a single line on the certificate.
Access rules also differ. Georgia death certificates are restricted records limited to eligible relatives and representatives, while a finalized autopsy report is a public record any person may request once the case is closed. For the certificate side, see the Georgia Death Records overview.
Georgia Autopsy Report Facts
| Item | Georgia |
|---|---|
| Public record? | Yes, once finalized (Georgia Open Records Act, O.C.G.A. 50-18-70) |
| Pending case | Exempt and withheld until the investigation closes |
| Who can request | Any person; next of kin pay no fee |
| System | County-based: elected coroner or appointed county medical examiner |
| State office | GBI Division of Forensic Sciences, Chief Medical Examiner |
| Where to request | GBI Open Records Unit, Decatur, or the local county coroner |
| Fee | No charge to next of kin; others may be billed before release |

Disclaimer: This page is general legal information, not legal advice. Open-records practices, fees, and processing times vary by county and can change. Confirm current requirements with the GBI Open Records Unit or the local county coroner before relying on this information.
For a broader look at how forensic examinations are treated nationwide, see Are Autopsies Public Records?. To compare other states, visit the Death Records by State hub.
Sources
This page is based on the Georgia Bureau of Investigation Division of Forensic Sciences (Medical Examiner's Office and Autopsies pages), the GBI Open Records Unit, the Georgia Death Investigation Act (O.C.G.A. Title 45, Chapter 16), the Georgia Open Records Act (O.C.G.A. 50-18-70), and the CDC's Georgia Coroner/Medical Examiner Laws summary.
Sources and References
- GBI Division of Forensic Sciences - Medical Examiners Office(dofs-gbi.georgia.gov).gov
- GBI Division of Forensic Sciences - Autopsies(dofs-gbi.georgia.gov).gov
- GBI Open Records Unit(gbi.georgia.gov).gov
- GBI Medical Examiner FAQ(dofs-gbi.georgia.gov).gov
- CDC - Georgia Coroner/Medical Examiner Laws(cdc.gov).gov