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

In Massachusetts, the cause of death is written on the death certificate, which is a public record. 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, so the cause of death is accessible without proving a family relationship. The fuller autopsy report is not public.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Massachusetts?
The most direct way to find someone's cause of death in Massachusetts is to order a certified copy of the death certificate. The cause of death is printed on the certificate itself, and the record is open to the public.
You can request the certificate from the city or town clerk where the death occurred, the clerk in the town where the person lived, or the state Registry of Vital Records and Statistics (RVRS). RVRS holds death records from 1936 to the present.
If the death was sudden, violent, or unexplained, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) likely investigated it and may have produced an autopsy report. That report is held separately and is not open to the general public.
For everyday situations, the death certificate is the source most people use. Obituaries and newspaper notices sometimes mention a cause, but those are not official and are often vague.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Massachusetts?
Yes. The cause of death is public in Massachusetts because it appears on the death certificate, and Massachusetts treats death certificates as open records. Any member of the public may order a certified copy, and there is no statutory waiting period.

This is consistent with how the parent record works. See Massachusetts Death Records for the full access rules governing certified copies.
The openness of the certificate is what makes the cause of death accessible. You do not need to be a relative, an estate representative, or have a legal interest to receive a standard certified copy.
The autopsy report is the exception. Under Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 38, Section 2, the chief medical examiner sets rules for releasing autopsy reports, and the statute states that those reports "shall not be deemed to be public records." So while the bottom-line cause on the certificate is public, the detailed forensic report behind it is not.
To see how this compares with other states, read Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death is recorded in two different places in Massachusetts, and they have very different access rules.
The Death Certificate
The death certificate carries the official cause of death in its medical certification section. A physician, nurse practitioner, physician assistant, or medical examiner completes this part. Because the certificate is a public record, this is the version of the cause of death most people can obtain.
The certificate states both the cause of death (the disease or injury that led to death) and the manner of death (natural, accident, suicide, homicide, or undetermined).
The Autopsy Report
When the OCME performs an autopsy, it produces a detailed autopsy report and, often, a toxicology report. These documents go far beyond the one-line cause printed on the certificate.
Under MGL Chapter 38, Section 2, autopsy reports are not public records. The OCME may, at its discretion, release a copy to the decedent's surviving spouse or the next closest living relative, following a defined priority order of spouse, adult children, parents, siblings, and onward.
If a death is part of an open law enforcement case, releasing the autopsy report requires approval from the district attorney investigating the death.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
To get the cause of death, start with the certified death certificate, then request the autopsy report only if you are eligible and need the detail.

For the death certificate, you can order through RVRS or the local clerk. RVRS accepts requests online, by phone, by mail, and in person, and standard certified copies show the cause of death. Confirm current fees and processing times directly with the office, since rates change.
For the autopsy report, the legal next of kin completes the OCME family request form and submits it by email or mail to the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Boston. OCME states that most reports are completed within about 90 days of death.
If you are not the next of kin, you generally cannot obtain the autopsy report itself, but the cause of death on the public death certificate is still available to you.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older or historical Massachusetts deaths, the cause of death usually appears on the archived death record, and access depends on where the record is held.

RVRS holds death records from 1936 to the present. The Massachusetts Archives holds vital records from 1841 to 1935, and these older death records are open for research and frequently list a cause of death.
For deaths before 1841, look to town clerks, church records, and local historical and genealogical society collections, which often preserve early death information.
The Social Security Death Index (SSDI) is a useful supporting tool, but it only confirms the fact and date of death. It does not list the cause of death, so you still need the certificate or archived record for that detail.
| Question | Massachusetts |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Yes, on the death certificate; autopsy reports are not public |
| Who can access it? | Anyone, for the death certificate; next of kin only for the autopsy report |
| Where is it recorded? | Medical certification section of the death certificate; the OCME autopsy report |
| Main source | RVRS or the city/town clerk; OCME for autopsy reports |
| Older records | Massachusetts Archives (1841-1935); RVRS (1936-present) |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Access rules, fees, and procedures change. Verify current requirements with the Massachusetts Registry of Vital Records and Statistics or the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner before relying on them.
Sources
This page draws on the Massachusetts Registry of Vital Records and Statistics, the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 38, and the Massachusetts Archives.
Back to Massachusetts Death Records or browse Death Records by State.
Sources and References
- Registry of Vital Records and Statistics - Ordering a Certificate(mass.gov).gov
- Request a Copy of an Autopsy Report - Families (OCME)(mass.gov).gov
- Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 38, Section 2 (Chief Medical Examiner; autopsy report disclosure)(malegislature.gov).gov
- Massachusetts General Laws Chapter 38, Section 3 (Duty to report deaths)(malegislature.gov).gov
- Massachusetts Archives - Vital Records, 1841-1935(sec.state.ma.us).gov