Kansas
Kansas Death Records: Are They Public + How to Get One

Kansas is a closed-record state for death certificates. Certified copies are not public records and are released only to the person named, immediate family, a legal representative, or someone with a documented direct interest. There is no fixed waiting period in years; instead, records become broadly accessible for genealogy once they predate the state's older registration era.
Are Death Records Public in Kansas?
No. Kansas death records are not public records. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) Office of Vital Statistics states plainly that vital records in Kansas are not open to the general public.
This makes Kansas a closed-record state. A certified copy is released only to people who meet specific eligibility rules and who can prove who they are.
Unlike open-record states, where anyone can buy a certified copy, Kansas restricts access to protect the privacy of the deceased and surviving family members. Access is tied to a documented need, not to simple curiosity.
Older records are treated differently. As death certificates age into the genealogical range, the rules loosen so researchers can study family history without proving a direct legal interest.
Who Can Request a Kansas Death Record?
A certified Kansas death certificate is released to a limited list of eligible requesters. According to the Office of Vital Statistics, certified copies go to the person named on the record, immediate family members, a legal representative, or anyone who can demonstrate a direct interest.

A direct interest means something concrete, such as a named beneficiary or someone who jointly owns property with the deceased. The record must be necessary for the determination of personal or property rights.
If you are not named on the record or an immediate family member, you must provide more. KDHE requires proof of legal representation, proof of direct interest, or written authorization, along with proper identification.
Every requester must verify identity. Plan to provide a current, government-issued photo ID, especially if you are picking up a certificate in person.
For genealogy, the timeline matters. Post-1940 death records must be requested by an immediate family member, while pre-1940 records may be requested for research by contacting the Office of Vital Statistics directly.
How to Get a Kansas Death Certificate
Kansas death certificates are issued by the KDHE Office of Vital Statistics. You can order by walk-in, by mail, by phone, online, or through the state's mobile app.
The base fee is $20 for each certified copy. That fee includes a five-year search of the records, and the same $20 base applies no matter which method you choose.
Some methods add service charges. Internet and telephone orders add an expedited service fee, the mobile app adds a small processing fee, and walk-in or mail orders are the $20 base with no surcharge.
Processing time depends on the method:
- Walk-in: about 15 to 20 minutes
- Internet or telephone: within 3 to 5 business days
- Mobile app (will call pickup): usually ready the following business day
- Mobile app (regular mail) or mail: 7 to 10 business days
Mail requests should include a completed application, the correct fee by check or money order, and a copy of your identification. Only the applicant can pick up a will-call certificate, and that person must show a current government-issued photo ID.
Because fees and processing options can change, confirm the current details with the Office of Vital Statistics before you send payment.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Kansas?
No. The cause of death is recorded on the Kansas death certificate, but the certificate itself is not public, so the cause of death is not available to the general public.

When an eligible requester receives a certified copy, the cause of death is included on that document. The restriction is on who may obtain the record, not on a separate redaction of the medical information.
Kansas does separate the simple fact that a person died from the full record. Under the Uniform Vital Statistics Act, fact-of-death information may be shared with state and federal agencies that run benefit programs, strictly for file-clearance purposes.
That narrow data-sharing does not open the cause of death to the public. For more on how states handle this medical detail, see our overview of whether cause of death records are public and whether autopsies are public records.
How Far Back Do Kansas Death Records Go?
Kansas statewide death registration began on July 1, 1911. The KDHE Office of Vital Statistics holds death certificates filed on or after that date, and there are no state death certificates for deaths before July 1, 1911.
For earlier deaths, families turn to county and historical sources. Some counties kept death registers from roughly 1885 to 1911, and the Kansas Historical Society helps researchers locate pre-1911 records.
Access loosens with age. Post-1940 records require an immediate family member, while pre-1940 records may be requested for genealogical research by contacting the Office of Vital Statistics. Records created before July 1, 1911 are open to inspection under the disclosure statute.
On the national level, there is no federal death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death certificates are issued by each state, not by the federal government, which is why Kansas controls its own records and rules.
Genealogists sometimes use the Social Security Death Index, drawn from the Social Security Administration's public Death Master File. Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, that public file excludes deaths within the most recent three calendar years, so it will not show very recent deaths. Researchers comparing record types may also find our guide on whether birth certificates are public records useful.
Kansas Death Records at a Glance
| Question | Kansas answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed record (not public) |
| Public-release waiting period | No fixed year limit; pre-1940 records open for genealogy, pre-July-1-1911 records open to inspection |
| Who can request a certified copy? | Person named, immediate family, legal representative, or someone with a direct/tangible interest |
| Fee per certified copy | $20 (includes a five-year search); online/phone/app add service fees |
| Issuing office | KDHE Office of Vital Statistics |
| Governing statute | Uniform Vital Statistics Act, K.S.A. 65-2422d |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about access to Kansas death records, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times change. Always verify the current requirements with the KDHE Office of Vital Statistics before relying on this information.
For access rules in every other state, see our Death Records by State guide.
Sources
This article is based on official guidance from the Kansas Department of Health and Environment Office of Vital Statistics, the Kansas Uniform Vital Statistics Act, and federal sources from the CDC and Social Security Administration, listed below.
Sources and References
- KDHE Office of Vital Statistics - Death Certificate ordering, fees, and eligibility(kdhe.ks.gov).gov
- KDHE Office of Vital Statistics - eligibility and confidentiality of Kansas vital records(kdhe.ks.gov).gov
- KDHE Genealogy Requests - pre-1940 and post-1940 death record access(kdhe.ks.gov).gov
- K.S.A. 65-2422d - Uniform Vital Statistics Act, disclosure of records(ksrevisor.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File public file (excludes deaths within last 3 calendar years)(ssa.gov).gov