Idaho
How to Find a Cause of Death in Idaho (2026)

To find someone's cause of death in Idaho, look first at the death certificate, which carries the medical certification of cause of death. Idaho is a closed-record state, so the cause of death on a certified certificate is restricted for 50 years and released only to eligible requesters. The public often learns the cause from an obituary or a coroner's report instead.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Idaho?
You find a cause of death in Idaho by obtaining the death certificate, which contains the official cause of death. The cause is entered in the medical certification section by the attending physician or, for unexplained deaths, by the county coroner.
Because Idaho keeps death records confidential, you generally must be an eligible requester to get the certified certificate that shows the cause. The certified copy is issued by the Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics.
If you are not eligible, the most common way to learn a cause of death is the obituary or a news report. For deaths that a coroner investigated, the coroner's office may also release information about the cause and manner of death.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Idaho?
No. The cause of death on an Idaho death certificate is not public for the first 50 years after the death. Idaho is a closed-record state, and vital records are legally confidential under Idaho Code 39-270 and exempt from disclosure under Idaho Code 74-106(4)(e).

During that 50-year period, the certified certificate and the cause of death it contains are released only to people who qualify under the law. After 50 years, the record becomes a public record and anyone may obtain it.
This is the same access rule described on our Idaho Death Records page. For how other states compare, see Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death appears in two main places: the death certificate and, when one exists, the autopsy report. These are separate records with different access rules.
On the Death Certificate
Every Idaho death certificate has a medical certification section. This is where the certifier lists the immediate cause of death, any underlying conditions, and the manner of death (natural, accident, suicide, homicide, or undetermined).
The certifier is the attending physician for most natural deaths. For violent, suspicious, or unattended deaths, the county coroner certifies the cause.
In the Autopsy Report
When a coroner orders an autopsy, the resulting report describes the examination and findings in detail. The coroner may authorize an autopsy by a licensed Idaho physician to scientifically determine the cause and manner of death (Idaho Code 19-4301B).
An autopsy report is held by the coroner's office, not the Bureau of Vital Records. It is a separate document from the certificate and is requested directly from the county coroner.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
To request the certified death certificate, contact the Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics, part of the Department of Health and Welfare. A certified copy costs $16, and you must show a direct and tangible interest in the record.

Orders are accepted online through VitalChek or by mail; there is no in-person counter. You include a photocopy of a signed government photo ID and your payment with the request.
For an autopsy report, contact the county coroner that investigated the death. The coroner certifies the cause of death and supplies the medical data behind it (Idaho Code 19-4301). Each county sets its own process and fees for releasing the report.
If you only need to confirm that someone died and when, the Social Security Death Index can help. It lists the fact and date of death but does not show the cause.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older deaths, the cause of death becomes much easier to access. Once 50 years have passed from the date of death, the Idaho death certificate is a public record open to anyone, including the cause of death it contains.

The Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics maintains death certificates filed since July 1911. Records that have passed the 50-year mark can be requested without showing a direct and tangible interest.
For deaths beyond the state's holdings or for added detail, county coroner files, historical newspaper obituaries, and cemetery or funeral records can fill in the cause of death. These genealogy-friendly sources often name a cause that a bare index entry will not.
| Question | Idaho |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Restricted for 50 years; public after 50 years |
| Who can access it before then? | Named person, immediate family, legal representative, or a direct and tangible interest |
| Where is it recorded? | Medical certification section of the death certificate; autopsy report if one exists |
| Main source | Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics (certificate); county coroner (autopsy) |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Access rules and fees can change, so verify the current requirements with the Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics or the relevant county coroner before you rely on them.
Sources
This page is based on the Idaho Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics, Idaho Code (Title 39 and Title 19), and the CDC's Idaho coroner law summary.
Return UP to Idaho Death Records or the hub Death Records by State.
Sources and References
- Idaho Department of Health and Welfare - Birth, Marriage, and Death Records(healthandwelfare.idaho.gov).gov
- Idaho DHW - About Death, Stillbirth, and Miscarriage Records (50-year confidentiality; records since July 1911)(healthandwelfare.idaho.gov).gov
- CDC Public Health Law Program - Idaho Coroner/Medical Examiner Laws(cdc.gov).gov
- Idaho Code 39-270 - Disclosure of vital records(legislature.idaho.gov).gov
- Idaho Code 19-4301 / 19-4301B - Coroner duties and autopsy authority(legislature.idaho.gov).gov