Mississippi
Mississippi Death Records: Are They Public + How to Get One

Mississippi is a closed-record state for death certificates. Only the next of kin, a legal representative, or someone with a legitimate and tangible interest in the record can obtain a certified copy. Death records stay restricted for 50 years from the date of death, after which they open for genealogical research.
Are Death Records Public in Mississippi?
No. Mississippi is a closed-record state, and death certificates are not public documents. Under Mississippi Code Section 41-57-2, vital records held by the Mississippi State Department of Health are exempt from the Mississippi Public Records Act unless the requester has a legitimate and tangible interest in the record.
Access to a Mississippi death certificate is restricted for 50 years from the date of death. During that window, only qualifying relatives, legal representatives, and people who can demonstrate a tangible interest may obtain a certified copy.
After 50 years, the record opens for genealogical research, and the state issues a plain-paper (non-certified) copy for that purpose. This closed-then-open structure is common nationwide. You can compare other jurisdictions on our Death Records by State hub.
There is no federal death-records database. As the CDC National Center for Health Statistics confirms, death records are issued and held by each state, so a Mississippi death record must come from Mississippi.
Who Can Request a Mississippi Death Record?
Within the 50-year restriction period, a certified Mississippi death certificate is available only to eligible requesters. The MSDH Vital Records office limits certified copies to the following people:

- The decedent's spouse, parent, grandparent, sibling, child, or grandchild
- A legal guardian or legal representative (an attorney must provide a bar number and the name of the person represented)
- The informant listed on the death record
- The funeral home of record that took possession of the body
- An agent of a local, state, or federal agency acting in an official capacity
- Any person named in a certified court order
- A person with a legitimate and tangible interest in the record
A legitimate and tangible interest is a direct, documented connection to the decedent. MSDH suggests proof such as a joint property deed, an insurance policy naming both the decedent and the applicant, or relevant court documents.
Every applicant must submit a completed application and a copy of a valid photo ID, such as a state driver license or photo ID, US passport, military or employment ID, permanent resident card, or tribal ID. Guardians and legal representatives must also attach proof of their authority.
How to Get a Mississippi Death Certificate
Death certificates are issued by the Mississippi State Department of Health (MSDH) Vital Records office. MSDH holds death records filed in Mississippi from November 1912 to the present. There are three ways to order.
By mail
Send a completed death certificate application (Form 523), a copy of your photo ID, and payment by cashier's check or money order to:
Mississippi Vital Records, P.O. Box 1700, Jackson, MS 39215-1700.
Allow about three weeks after mailing before checking on the status of a mailed request.
In person
Visit the MSDH Vital Records office at 222 Marketridge Drive in Ridgeland, open Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The office accepts cash, check, money order, or card, and the record is typically mailed within 7 to 10 business days of ordering.
Online or by phone
MSDH partners with a private vital-records vendor for credit-card orders placed online or by phone. Expect an added service fee charged by the vendor on top of the state fee.
The state fee is $17 for the first certified copy and $6 for each additional copy ordered at the same time. For questions, call the Vital Records office at 601-206-8200 or email VRInfo@msdh.ms.gov.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Mississippi?
No. The cause of death is printed on the Mississippi death certificate, and because the entire certificate is restricted for 50 years, the cause of death is released only to eligible requesters during that period. The general public cannot obtain it.

Mississippi does not split the record into separate confidential and public versions the way some states do. The full certificate, including the cause of death, is treated as one restricted document until the 50-year period elapses.
If you are researching how cause-of-death and autopsy information is handled more broadly, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?. Coroner and medical-examiner reports follow different access rules from the vital record itself.
How Far Back Do Mississippi Death Records Go?
Statewide death registration in Mississippi began in 1912, and MSDH holds death records filed from November 1912 to the present. Records older than 50 years are open for genealogical research as plain-paper copies, while anything within the 50-year window stays restricted to eligible requesters.
For deaths that predate statewide registration, researchers often turn to county records, cemetery and church records, and probate files. Birth-side genealogy follows a similar pattern, which you can read about in Are Birth Certificates Public Records?.
At the national level, the Social Security Administration maintains a Death Master File. Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, the public version of that file excludes any death that occurred within the last three calendar years, so it is not a substitute for a recent certified Mississippi record.
Mississippi Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | Mississippi Answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed record |
| Waiting period before public/genealogy access | 50 years from date of death |
| Who can request a certified copy? | Spouse, parent, grandparent, sibling, child, grandchild, guardian, legal representative, informant, court order, or a person with a legitimate and tangible interest |
| Fee | $17 first copy; $6 each additional copy |
| Issuing office | Mississippi State Department of Health (MSDH) Vital Records |
| Governing statute | Miss. Code Sec. 41-57-2 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about access to Mississippi death records, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times change. Always confirm current requirements directly with the Mississippi State Department of Health Vital Records office before ordering.
Sources
This article is based on the Mississippi State Department of Health Vital Records office, the Mississippi vital-statistics code, and federal CDC/NCHS and SSA records guidance, cited below.
Sources and References
- Mississippi State Department of Health - Death Certificates(msdh.ms.gov).gov
- MSDH - Death Certificate Application Instructions (eligibility, fees, ID)(msdh.ms.gov).gov
- Mississippi Code Sec. 41-57-2 - Certain persons not entitled to access to records(law.justia.com)
- MSDH - Questions and Answers About Vital Records (50-year restriction; records from 1912)(msdh.ms.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- U.S. Social Security Administration - Death Master File(ssa.gov).gov