Iowa
Iowa Death Records: Are They Public + How to Get Them

Iowa runs a two-track death-records system, so it is not flatly closed. A record of death held by a county registrar may be inspected and copied as of right under Iowa's open-records law, with no waiting period and no eligibility test. Records held by the state registrar are different: a certified state copy is released only to the deceased person's spouse, children, parents, grandparents, grandchildren, siblings, legal representative, or guardian, and at the State Archives a death record opens to the public once it is at least 50 years old.
Are Death Records Public in Iowa?
It depends on who holds the record. Iowa Code 144.43 sets up two tracks. A record of death (other than a fetal death) in the custody of a county registrar "may be inspected and copied as of right under chapter 22," Iowa's open-records law. That means county death records carry no waiting period and no eligibility test, and any member of the public may inspect or copy them.
Records held by the state registrar are restricted. A certified copy issued by the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services is released only to people with a recognized relationship to the deceased or a legal interest in the record. So the same death can be open at the county level and gated at the state level, depending on which office you ask.
At the State Archives, a death record becomes fully public once it is at least 50 years old, after which anyone may inspect or copy it as a matter of right. By contrast, birth, marriage, and divorce records do not open at the Archives until they are at least 75 years old, so the 75-year figure people often cite does not apply to deaths.
There is no national death-records database that overrides Iowa's rules. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death records are issued and controlled by each state, not the federal government.
Who Can Request an Iowa Death Record?
For a certified copy from the state registrar, only entitled persons may apply. The eligibility list set by the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services includes the deceased person's spouse, children, legal parents, grandparents, grandchildren, and siblings.

A legal representative or guardian may also request a certified copy. Siblings, legal representatives, and guardians may need to provide additional documentation proving their entitlement to the record.
Every applicant for a certified state copy must submit a completed request form along with a clear photocopy of a current government-issued photo identification. Acceptable ID includes a state driver's license, a state-issued ID card, a military ID, or a passport.
If you are not on the eligibility list, you can still reach county-held death records, which are open to the public as of right under chapter 22, and you can access state records once they are at least 50 years old through the State Archives. The eligibility test applies to certified copies from the state registrar, not to the public county records.
For a broader view of how access rules differ across the country, see our Death Records by State guide.
How to Get an Iowa Death Certificate
You can order an Iowa death certificate from the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services, Bureau of Health Statistics, or from a county registrar in the county where the death occurred or where the deceased resided. The state office is located at 321 E. 12th Street, Des Moines, IA 50319.
Each certified copy costs $15.00. That fee pays for a search of the record. It is non-refundable, and if no matching record is found you will receive a "no-record" letter for the same fee.
There are several ways to request a record:
- In person: Visit the Bureau of Health Statistics in Des Moines, Monday through Friday. In-person requests submitted by early afternoon are often processed within a couple of hours.
- By mail: Send a completed, notarized application, a copy of your photo ID, and payment by check or money order to the Bureau of Health Statistics. Regular mail processing typically takes about 4 to 6 weeks.
- Online or by phone: Iowa uses an independent verification vendor for online and telephone orders, which adds an authentication fee on top of the $15.00 state fee.
Processing times vary by method. Expedited shipping options shorten delivery, while standard mail is the slowest route. Always confirm the current fees and forms with the office before sending payment, since rules and prices can change.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Iowa?
For county records, yes. Because a county registrar's record of death is open to the public as of right under chapter 22, the cause of death listed on that record is publicly accessible, with no waiting period and no eligibility test.

For a certified copy from the state registrar, the cause of death is released only to the entitled family members, legal representatives, and guardians listed above while the record is recent. This keeps the certified state copy restricted even though the underlying county record is open.
At the State Archives, the full state-held record, including the cause of death, becomes public once the death record is at least 50 years old. For more on how states handle this, read our explainer on whether Cause of Death Records Are Public and whether Autopsies Are Public Records.
How Far Back Do Iowa Death Records Go?
Iowa's statewide vital records extend back to July 1880, when the state began centralized registration of births, deaths, and marriages. Records before that date may exist at the county level but are far less complete.
State-held death records that are at least 50 years old move into the public domain through the State Archives, where researchers and genealogists can inspect them. County-held death records are open to the public as of right regardless of age, while birth, marriage, and divorce records do not open at the Archives until they are at least 75 years old.
For deaths nationwide, the Social Security Administration's public Death Master File is another research tool, but it is limited. Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, the public version of that file excludes any death that occurred within the last three calendar years.
If you are researching family history, you may also need related vital records. See our guide on whether Birth Certificates Are Public Records for how Iowa and other states handle those documents.
Iowa Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | Iowa Answer |
|---|---|
| Are death records public? | Two-track: county death records are open to the public under chapter 22; certified state copies are restricted |
| Is there a waiting period for county records? | No, county records (except fetal deaths) may be inspected and copied as of right |
| When do state records become public? | After 50 years for death records at the State Archives (75 years for birth, marriage, divorce) |
| Who can get a certified state copy? | Spouse, children, legal parents, grandparents, grandchildren, siblings, legal representative, or guardian |
| Fee per certified copy | $15.00 (non-refundable; covers record search) |
| Issuing office | Iowa Dept. of Health and Human Services, Bureau of Health Statistics, and county registrars |
| Governing statute | Iowa Code Chapter 144 (Vital Statistics), section 144.43 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in Iowa, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times can change. Always verify the current requirements with the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services before submitting a request.
Sources
This article cites Iowa's official vital records statute at legis.iowa.gov (Iowa Code 144.43) and the Iowa Department of Health and Human Services vital records office at hhs.iowa.gov, along with federal records guidance; see the linked government sources below.
Sources and References
- Iowa HHS Vital Records: How to Request a Certified Record(hhs.iowa.gov).gov
- Iowa HHS Bureau of Health Statistics: Vital Records(hhs.iowa.gov).gov
- Iowa Code Chapter 144 - Vital Statistics (incl. 144.43)(legis.iowa.gov).gov
- CDC/NCHS - Where to Write for Vital Records, Iowa(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File(ssa.gov).gov