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

Kentucky is an open-record state for death certificates. State law lets anyone who pays the fee and supplies enough information to identify the record buy a certified copy from the Office of Vital Statistics. Older death records in the state registrar's custody become fully public 50 years after the date of death.
Are Death Records Public in Kentucky?
Yes. Kentucky is an open-record state for vital records. The Office of Vital Statistics confirms that the legislature has decreed anyone who pays the proper search fee and supplies enough information to identify the record may obtain a certified copy of a death certificate.
This makes Kentucky more open than many states, where certified copies are restricted to family members or people with a documented legal interest until a waiting period passes. In Kentucky, eligibility is not the gatekeeper; correct identifying information and the fee are.
Access to vital records is governed by Kentucky's vital-statistics law, not by the general Open Records Act. KRS 213.131 sets the rules for how records are inspected, copied, and released.
There is still a long-term public-record threshold. Under KRS 213.131(5), once 50 years have elapsed after the date of death, death records in the custody of the state registrar become public records. That provision applies specifically to records held by the state registrar.
For the bigger picture on how cause-of-death information is treated across states, see our overview of whether cause of death records are public.
Who Can Request a Kentucky Death Record?
In practice, any requester can. Because Kentucky is open-record, the Office of Vital Statistics issues certified death certificates to applicants who provide the information needed to locate the record and pay the fee.

To order, you supply the decedent's full name, the month, day, and year of death, and the county of death, along with your own name, mailing address, and a daytime phone number. You also indicate how many copies you want.
This contrasts with closed-record states, where the office first checks whether you are the surviving spouse, a parent, an adult child, or a legal representative before releasing a certified copy. Kentucky does not impose that eligibility screen for death certificates.
That said, providing accurate identifying details matters. If the office cannot match your request to a specific record, it cannot issue a certified copy, and search fees are non-refundable.
How to Get a Kentucky Death Certificate
Certified Kentucky death certificates come from one place: the Office of Vital Statistics (OVS), part of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services. Local county offices and online vendors route to the same state system.
The fee is $6.00 for each certified copy, with no discount for additional copies. Payment is made by check or money order payable to the Kentucky State Treasurer, and the fee is non-refundable.
Ordering Methods
By mail. Send a completed application and payment to the Office of Vital Statistics, 275 East Main Street 1E-A, Frankfort, KY 40621. Mailed and drop-box requests can take up to 30 working days to process from the date payment is posted.
In person. Visit the OVS lobby at 275 East Main Street in Frankfort, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Eastern time, excluding state holidays.
By phone. Call the toll-free line at (800) 241-8322 and choose option 1. Orders are accepted around the clock; a charge-card fee and shipment fee apply on top of the $6.00 copy fee.
Online. Internet orders are placed through the state's authorized vendor with a credit card or check; additional service and shipping fees apply. UPS overnight and weekend delivery are available for an extra charge.
The OVS does not issue photocopies, faxed copies, non-certified copies, or electronic copies. Every record it releases is a certified copy.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Kentucky?
Cause of death is recorded on the Kentucky death certificate. Because Kentucky is an open-record state, that information appears on the certified copy alongside the fact of death.

This differs from states that issue a restricted "long form" with the cause of death only to family or legal representatives, while offering a "short form" without it to the general public. Kentucky's open-record framework does not split the certificate that way for general death-record access.
Cause-of-death details on a certificate originate with the certifying physician or coroner. For deaths investigated by a coroner, related records such as autopsy reports follow separate rules. See our guide on whether autopsy reports are public records for how those documents are handled.
If you are comparing how different vital documents are released, our explainer on whether birth certificates are public records shows how birth records are treated more restrictively than deaths in most states, including a longer 100-year threshold in Kentucky.
How Far Back Do Kentucky Death Records Go?
Statewide death registration in Kentucky began in January 1911, when the Office of Vital Statistics started keeping birth and death records. Records from 1911 forward are held by the state registrar.
Under KRS 213.131(5), death records in the state registrar's custody become public records 50 years after the date of death. That public-record status applies to the older, historical end of the collection.
There is no federal death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) compiles national mortality statistics, but the actual certificates are issued by each state, so Kentucky records come from Kentucky.
For deaths nationwide, the Social Security Administration maintains a Death Master File. Its public version excludes deaths that occurred within the most recent three calendar years, a limit set by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, so it is not a substitute for a recent certified Kentucky certificate.
Kentucky Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | Kentucky answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Open record; any requester who pays the fee and identifies the record may obtain a certified copy |
| Waiting period until fully public | 50 years after date of death (KRS 213.131(5)), for records in the state registrar's custody |
| Who can request a certified copy | Any requester providing the required identifying information and fee |
| Fee per certified copy | $6.00 (additional copies also $6.00 each) |
| Issuing office | Kentucky Office of Vital Statistics, Frankfort |
| Governing statute | KRS Chapter 213 (Vital Statistics), KRS 213.131 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about access to Kentucky death records, not legal advice. Records-access rules, fees, and processing times change. Always confirm current requirements with the Kentucky Office of Vital Statistics before submitting a request.
For certified copies in every other state, see our Death Records by State directory.
Sources
This page draws on the Kentucky Office of Vital Statistics, the Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS Chapter 213), the CDC National Center for Health Statistics, and the Social Security Administration; full citations are listed below.
Sources and References
- Kentucky Office of Vital Statistics - Death Certificates(chfs.ky.gov).gov
- Kentucky Registrar Guidelines (Office of Vital Statistics): Kentucky is an open record state(chfs.ky.gov).gov
- KRS 213.131 - Vital records confidentiality and 50-year public-record provision(legislature.ky.gov).gov
- Kentucky VS-31 Death Certificate Application ($6.00 fee, up to 30 working days)(chfs.ky.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File / Limited Access(ssa.gov).gov