Maryland
How to Find Someone's Cause of Death in Maryland (2026)

Cause of death in Maryland is recorded in the medical certification on the death certificate and, for cases handled by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, in the autopsy report. The certificate itself is closed to the general public, but OCME autopsy reports are largely public records, so for sudden, violent, or unexplained deaths you can often request a report directly.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Maryland?
You find a cause of death in Maryland by locating either the death certificate or the autopsy report, because those are the two records that state it. The certificate carries a medical certification of cause of death completed by a physician or medical examiner. The autopsy report carries the OCME's findings on cause and manner of death.
The realistic path depends on who you are. A surviving relative, that relative's authorized representative, or the funeral director can request a death certificate that shows the cause of death.
Anyone trying to learn how a person died, including a family member, can also request an OCME autopsy report when the medical examiner handled the case. For many sudden or unexplained deaths, the autopsy report is the most accessible official document.
Before chasing records, check the obituary and any newspaper coverage. These are public and often state the cause of death directly or hint at it.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Maryland?
The cause of death is not freely public on the death certificate, but it is often reachable through the autopsy report. Maryland is a closed-record state, so certified death certificates are issued only to entitled people, and the Division of Vital Records does not provide copies for genealogical purposes. People who are not entitled requesters are directed to the Maryland State Archives.

Under Maryland Health-General Section 4-217, the Division of Vital Records issues a certified copy only to a person authorized by law. There is no waiting period that opens recent death certificates to anyone who asks.
The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner works differently. Unless a death is still under investigation, OCME autopsy reports are generally treated as public documents that family members and other interested parties can request.
So the cause of death is partly restricted and partly open. The certificate route is limited to eligible requesters, while the OCME autopsy route is broadly available for the deaths the medical examiner handles.
You can read more about how states handle this in Are Cause of Death Records Public?
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death is recorded in two official Maryland records: the death certificate and, when applicable, the OCME autopsy report. Each serves a different purpose.
The Death Certificate
Every Maryland death certificate includes a medical certification section. A physician or medical examiner enters the immediate cause of death, the underlying conditions, and the manner of death. This is the legal record of why the person died.
The Division of Vital Records holds Maryland deaths from 2012 forward. Because the certificate is a closed record, only eligible requesters receive a copy that shows the cause of death.
The Autopsy Report
When the OCME investigates a death, it produces an autopsy report stating the cause and manner of death. The medical examiner investigates deaths that are sudden and unexpected, violent, accidental, suspicious, drug or alcohol related, or that occur in custody or without recent medical care.
These reports often contain far more detail than the certificate. Because they are generally public, they can be the best source when you want to understand how someone died.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
To get a record that shows the cause of death, request a certified death certificate if you are eligible, or request the autopsy report from the OCME. The two requests go to different offices.

For a death certificate, apply to the Maryland Division of Vital Records. You must prove you are a surviving relative, an authorized representative, or the funeral director, using documents such as a birth certificate, marriage certificate, obituary, letter of administration, or a signed authorization of release.
For an autopsy report, submit the OCME autopsy report request form to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Baltimore. First-degree relatives (spouse, parent, child, or sibling) pay no fee, and all other requesters pay $50. Payment is by check or money order, and the OCME does not issue death certificates itself.
If a case is still under investigation, the OCME may withhold the report until the investigation concludes. Most reports are completed within about 90 days of the determination of cause and manner of death.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older Maryland deaths, look to the Maryland State Archives, which holds historic death records that often include the cause of death. Access widens as records age.

The Division of Vital Records keeps deaths from 2012 forward. For earlier deaths, the State Archives holds Baltimore City records from 1875 and county records from 1898, and it provides certified copies by mail.
All Maryland death records over 100 years old are available to view online from home through the Archives. These older certificates typically list the cause of death along with names, dates, and burial details, which makes them useful for genealogy.
For a simple confirmation that a person died, the Social Security Death Index can verify the fact and date of death. It does not list a cause of death, so it works as a starting point rather than a source for how someone died.
| Question | Maryland |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Restricted on the death certificate; OCME autopsy reports are generally public |
| Who can access the certificate? | Surviving relative, authorized representative, or funeral director |
| Where is the cause of death recorded? | Death certificate medical certification and OCME autopsy report |
| Main source for the public | OCME autopsy report; obituary; older records at the State Archives |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Access rules, fees, and forms change. Verify the current requirements with the Maryland Division of Vital Records or the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner before you rely on them.
Sources
This page draws on the Maryland Department of Health Division of Vital Records, the Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, and the Maryland State Archives.
Up to Maryland Death Records. See all states on the Death Records by State hub.
Sources and References
- Maryland Department of Health, Division of Vital Records — Death Certificates(health.maryland.gov).gov
- Maryland Department of Health — Death Certificate Entitlement Documentation(health.maryland.gov).gov
- Maryland OCME — Requesting Autopsy Reports and Death Certificates(health.maryland.gov).gov
- Maryland OCME — Case Criteria (deaths investigated)(health.maryland.gov).gov
- Maryland State Archives — Guide to Government Records: Death(msa.maryland.gov).gov