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

Missouri is a closed-record state for death certificates. Only family members, legal representatives, and people with a direct and tangible interest can buy a certified copy from the Missouri Bureau of Vital Records. Death records become open to the public once they are more than 50 years old.
Are Death Records Public in Missouri?
No. Missouri is a closed-record state for recent death certificates. State law treats vital records as confidential, so certified copies are released only to eligible people rather than to anyone who asks.
Under RSMo 193.245, it is unlawful to permit inspection of or disclose information from a vital record except as authorized by law or court order. The same statute opens the door to the public after a set period.
That waiting period is 50 years. Copies of death records more than 50 years old may be disclosed upon request, which makes older Missouri death records genuinely public.
This pattern is common nationwide. For a state-by-state comparison, see our Death Records by State hub.
Who Can Request a Missouri Death Record?
Eligible requesters are people with a documented connection to the deceased. The Missouri Bureau of Vital Records limits certified copies to specific categories of applicants.

Those who may request a certified death certificate include:
- Immediate and extended family members, including in-laws, cousins, and step-relations
- The surviving spouse, parents, children, grandparents, and siblings of the deceased
- A legal representative, such as an attorney acting for an eligible family member
- A funeral director or physician handling matters for the family
- A genealogist representing a family member, or a professionally recognized genealogist
- Anyone with a direct and tangible interest, when the record is needed to determine or protect a personal or property right
If the death record is less than 50 years old, the application generally must identify at least one parent named on the record. Once a record passes the 50-year mark, that requirement falls away because the record is public.
What ID Do You Need?
In person, you must present one government photo ID, or two alternative forms of identification if you have no photo ID. By mail, the application must be signed and notarized instead. Anyone claiming a tangible interest should include documents that show the connection.
How to Get a Missouri Death Certificate
You order Missouri death certificates from the Department of Health and Senior Services, Bureau of Vital Records, or from a participating local public health agency. There are three main ways to apply.
By mail, send a notarized application, the fee, and a self-addressed stamped envelope to the Bureau of Vital Records, 930 Wildwood Drive, Jefferson City, MO 65109. Mail requests typically take about four to eight weeks depending on volume.
In person, you can apply at the Bureau of Vital Records or at one of the local public health agencies across the state that offer same-day or next-day service.
Online or by phone, Missouri uses the state-authorized vendor VitalChek for expedited orders, which adds a processing surcharge on top of the state fee.
The fee is $14 for the first certified copy and $11 for each additional copy of the same record. Each search covers a five-year span, so provide an accurate date of death to avoid extra search fees.
Because fees and processing times change, confirm the current amounts on the Bureau of Vital Records order page before you mail anything.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Missouri?
The cause of death is printed on the standard Missouri certified death certificate. It is not carved out as a separately restricted field, so once you qualify to receive the record, you receive the cause of death along with it.

What protects the cause of death is the same confidentiality rule that governs the whole certificate. While a record is less than 50 years old, only eligible requesters can obtain it, which keeps the cause of death out of general public view.
After the 50-year window, the full record, cause of death included, can be disclosed on request. For the broader rules on this topic, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?, since autopsy and coroner files follow their own access rules.
How Far Back Do Missouri Death Records Go?
Statewide death registration in Missouri began in 1910. The Bureau of Vital Records holds certified death records from that point forward, and a small number of delayed certificates may predate 1910 without any guarantee.
Records more than 50 years old are searchable through the Missouri Digital Heritage death index, maintained by the Secretary of State, rather than ordered as restricted certified copies. That index is the public-facing route for genealogy and historical research.
On the national side, there is no federal death-records database. The CDC and the National Center for Health Statistics confirm that the federal government does not maintain files or indexes of vital records; every certificate is filed in the state or local office where the death occurred.
The Social Security Administration's public Death Master File is a separate index, not a certificate source. Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, the public Death Master File excludes deaths that occurred within the prior three calendar years. For related vital records, see Are Birth Certificates Public Records?.
Missouri Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | Missouri answer |
|---|---|
| Are death records public? | No, closed-record; restricted until more than 50 years old |
| Waiting period before records are public | 50 years (RSMo 193.245) |
| Who can request a recent record? | Family, legal representatives, genealogists, anyone with a direct and tangible interest |
| Fee | $14 first copy, $11 each additional copy |
| Issuing office | Missouri DHSS, Bureau of Vital Records, Jefferson City |
| Governing statute | RSMo 193.245 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in Missouri, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times change. Always confirm current requirements with the Missouri Bureau of Vital Records before you apply.
Sources
This article cites primary government sources, including the Missouri Bureau of Vital Records, the Revised Statutes of Missouri, the CDC National Center for Health Statistics, and the Social Security Administration.
Sources and References
- Missouri Bureau of Vital Records - Order a Copy of a Vital Record(health.mo.gov).gov
- Revised Statutes of Missouri, RSMo Section 193.245 - Confidentiality of vital records(revisor.mo.gov).gov
- Missouri Bureau of Vital Records - Frequently Asked Questions(health.mo.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- U.S. Social Security Administration - Requesting SSA Death Information (Death Master File)(ssa.gov).gov