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

Finding someone's cause of death in Kansas usually means getting one of two documents: the death certificate, which carries a medical cause-of-death line but is closed to eligible requesters only, or the coroner's completed autopsy report, which is a public record under the Kansas Open Records Act. For older deaths, an obituary or genealogy record often supplies the answer.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Kansas?
You find a cause of death in Kansas by obtaining one of two records: the death certificate or the coroner's autopsy report. The death certificate carries a brief medical cause-of-death line, while the autopsy report carries the full forensic findings when an autopsy was performed.
The two documents have very different access rules. The death certificate is closed and goes only to eligible requesters, but the completed autopsy report is open to the public under the Kansas Open Records Act.
Many people never need either document. An obituary, a funeral notice, or a family member often supplies the cause of death faster than an official record request.
For practical guidance on which document to pursue, start with how you are related to the deceased and how recent the death was. Close family can request the certificate; anyone can request a finished autopsy report; and historical deaths often surface through genealogy.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Kansas?
It depends on the document. The cause-of-death line on a certified death certificate is not public, because Kansas is a closed-record state. 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.

Certified copies, including the cause-of-death line they contain, are released only to the person named on the record, immediate family, a legal representative, or anyone who can prove a direct interest. That restriction follows the parent Kansas death-records rules.
The autopsy report is the exception. A completed autopsy report is a public record under the Kansas Open Records Act, so the cause of death it documents is publicly accessible once the case is closed and the report is on file.
In short, the certificate keeps the cause of death private, but the autopsy report can make it public. For the broader rule across states, see Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death is recorded in two distinct documents in Kansas. Knowing which one you need tells you how to request it and whether you are eligible.
The Death Certificate
Every Kansas death certificate includes a medical certification that lists the immediate cause of death and any underlying conditions. A physician, coroner, or medical examiner completes that section.
This line is concise. It names the cause but does not explain the full investigation, lab work, or forensic detail behind it.
Because the certificate is a closed record, the cause-of-death line is released only to eligible requesters through the KDHE Office of Vital Statistics.
The Autopsy Report
When a death is sudden, violent, or unexplained, a district coroner may order an autopsy. Under K.S.A. 22a-233, the pathologist must promptly file a full record and report of the autopsy findings with the coroner and with the clerk of the district court.
The autopsy report is far more detailed than the certificate. It documents the examination, toxicology, and the pathologist's conclusions about the cause and manner of death. Because it is public under the Kansas Open Records Act, it is often the most accessible route to a detailed cause of death.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
Your route depends on which document you need and your relationship to the deceased.

To request the death certificate, contact the KDHE Office of Vital Statistics in Topeka. You must be an eligible requester, pay the $20 certified-copy fee, and provide identification. Full ordering steps are on the Kansas death certificate page.
To request a completed autopsy report, send a written request to the clerk of the district court in the county where the death occurred. Anyone may request it once the case is closed, and the clerk charges a reasonable fee not exceeding actual cost.
One timing limit applies to the autopsy report. If the death is tied to a crime, the coroner may designate the report a criminal investigation record, which withholds it while the case is still open.
If you only need to confirm that a death happened, the Social Security Death Index draws on the Social Security Administration Death Master File. That file lists the name, dates, and Social Security number but never includes a cause of death.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older deaths, the easiest path is often an obituary or newspaper archive rather than an official record. Obituaries frequently describe the cause of death or the circumstances surrounding it, and local libraries and historical societies hold the archives.
Genealogy rules also loosen with age. The KDHE Office of Vital Statistics handles genealogy requests, and pre-1940 Kansas death records may be requested for research without proving a direct legal interest. Post-1940 records still require an immediate family member.
Coroner and autopsy records filed with the clerk of the district court remain available for older cases too, since the completed report is a public record under the Kansas Open Records Act. Court archives and the State Archives can help locate historical files.
For very old deaths, the cause of death recorded on the certificate becomes the practical answer once the record ages into the genealogical range.
Kansas Cause-of-Death Records at a Glance
| Question | Kansas |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | On the death certificate, no (closed record); in a completed autopsy report, yes (public under KORA) |
| Who can access the certificate cause-of-death line? | Person named, immediate family, legal representative, or someone with a proven direct interest |
| Where is the cause of death recorded? | Medical certification on the death certificate and the coroner's autopsy report |
| Main public source for a detailed cause | Completed autopsy report filed with the clerk of the district court |

Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Access rules, fees, and procedures change, so verify the current requirements with the KDHE Office of Vital Statistics or the clerk of the district court before you request a record.
Sources
This guide draws on the KDHE Office of Vital Statistics, the Kansas coroner statutes at K.S.A. 22a-233, the Kansas Open Records Act, and the Social Security Administration Death Master File.
Sources and References
- KDHE Office of Vital Statistics - Kansas vital records are not open to the general public; eligibility and access rules(kdhe.ks.gov).gov
- KDHE Office of Vital Statistics - Death Certificate ordering, fees, and eligible requesters(kdhe.ks.gov).gov
- K.S.A. 22a-233 - Autopsy; pathologist files full record and report with the coroner and clerk of the district court(ksrevisor.gov).gov
- KDHE Vital Statistics - Genealogy Requests; pre-1940 and post-1940 death record access(kdhe.ks.gov).gov
- Kansas Attorney General - Kansas Open Records Act FAQ(ag.ks.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File public file (fact of death only; excludes deaths within the last 3 calendar years)(ssa.gov).gov