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

Massachusetts is an open-record state for death certificates. The fact of death is public, so anyone may order a certified copy from the city or town clerk where the death occurred or from the state Registry of Vital Records and Statistics. There is no general waiting period before death records become available.
Are Death Records Public in Massachusetts?
Yes. Massachusetts treats the fact of death as a public record. Any member of the public may request and receive a certified copy of a death certificate, and there is no statutory waiting period that must pass before a record becomes available.
This is different from many states that close death records to family or legal representatives for decades. In Massachusetts, the certificate is open from the time it is filed.
State law does carve out a narrow set of restricted records under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 46, Section 2A. Those restrictions cover records such as births to unmarried parents, fetal death records, and certain marriage notices. Ordinary death certificates are not on that restricted list.
One piece of data is shielded even on an open record. The Social Security number recorded on a death certificate is not released except to a person with a legitimate need, as defined by Department of Public Health regulations.
If you want to understand how cause-of-death and autopsy information is treated more broadly, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?.
Who Can Request a Massachusetts Death Record?
Anyone can request a standard Massachusetts death certificate. Because the record is public, you do not need to prove a family relationship or a legal interest to buy a certified copy of an ordinary death record.

You will need to provide enough identifying details to locate the record, including the full name of the deceased, the date of death, and the city or town where the death occurred.
The open-access rule applies to the death certificate itself. For the limited categories of restricted vital records under Chapter 46, Section 2A, access is narrowed to the person named on the record, that person's attorney, parent, guardian, or conservator, the decedent's personal representative, someone whose official duties entitle them to the information, or a person acting under a proper court order.
The restricted Social Security number on a death record follows the same tighter standard and is released only to those with a documented legitimate need.
How to Get a Massachusetts Death Certificate
You can order a certified Massachusetts death certificate three ways: from the local city or town clerk, from the statewide Registry of Vital Records and Statistics, or through the state's online and telephone vendor.
Order from the city or town clerk
The fastest route is usually the clerk in the city or town where the death occurred. Local clerks keep their own death records and can issue certified copies in person.
Order from the Registry of Vital Records and Statistics
The Registry of Vital Records and Statistics (RVRS), part of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, issues statewide certified copies. RVRS holds death records from 1936 to the present. The 1931 to 1935 records were recently moved to the Massachusetts State Archives.
You can order from RVRS in person, by mail, or online and by telephone through the state's authorized vendor.
Fees and processing time
As of 2026, the Registry's fees are roughly:
- In person: about $20 per copy
- Standard mail: about $32 per copy, processed in about 15 to 20 business days
- Expedited mail: about $42 per copy, processed in about 10 business days
- Online or telephone: about $54 for the first copy, with additional copies and expedited service costing more
Fees change, and the local clerk may charge a different amount, so confirm the current price with the office before you send payment. For records before 1931, the Massachusetts Archives issues certified copies for about $3 each.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Massachusetts?
Yes. The cause of death is recorded on the standard Massachusetts death certificate, and because the certificate is a public record, the cause of death is generally available on the certified copy.

This is a key difference from closed-record states, where the cause of death is often withheld from the public for many years. In Massachusetts, the medical cause of death is part of the open record.
There are narrow exceptions. Information considered a medical record, or material restricted under other provisions, may be withheld even when the underlying death record is public. For deeper detail on how this varies, see Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
How Far Back Do Massachusetts Death Records Go?
Massachusetts death records are split between two state offices. The Registry of Vital Records and Statistics holds death records from 1936 to the present, while the Massachusetts Archives holds statewide vital records, including deaths, from 1841 to 1935. The 1931 to 1935 records were recently transferred from RVRS to the Archives.

Older records, from 1841 onward, are public and have been indexed and digitized. The Massachusetts Archives makes a vital records index and citation database available, and certified copies of pre-1931 records cost about $3 each.
There is no national death-records database that replaces these state files. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death certificates are issued by the states, and its National Death Index is a research tool, not a public lookup.
The Social Security Administration's public Death Master File is the closest thing to a national index, but under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 it excludes deaths that occurred within the most recent three calendar years. For recent deaths, the state certificate from Massachusetts remains the authoritative source. Records like these are often used alongside birth certificates for genealogy and estate work.
| Question | Massachusetts answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Open. Death certificates are public. |
| Waiting period before public? | None for ordinary death records. |
| Who can request? | Anyone, for a standard death certificate. |
| Typical fee | About $20 in person, $32 by mail, $54 online (2026). |
| Issuing office | Registry of Vital Records and Statistics (Dept. of Public Health) and local city or town clerks. |
| Governing law | Mass. General Laws Chapter 46. |
Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public-records access in Massachusetts, not legal advice. Fees, processing times, and access rules change, and individual offices may apply them differently. Confirm current requirements with the Registry of Vital Records and Statistics or your local city or town clerk before relying on this information.
Looking for another state? See the full Death Records by State guide.
Sources
This article is based on official Massachusetts state government sources, including the Registry of Vital Records and Statistics, the Massachusetts General Laws, the Massachusetts Archives, and federal sources at the CDC and Social Security Administration, cited below.
Sources and References
- Massachusetts Registry of Vital Records and Statistics - Death Certificates(mass.gov).gov
- Mass.gov - Vital Records Service Fees(mass.gov).gov
- Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 46, Section 2A (restricted vital records)(malegislature.gov).gov
- Massachusetts Archives - Vital Records, 1841-1935(sec.state.ma.us).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - National Death Index(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Requesting SSA Death Information (Death Master File)(ssa.gov).gov