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

Nevada is a closed-record state for death certificates. A certified Nevada death certificate is confidential and may be issued only to a qualified applicant, such as the immediate family of the deceased or a legal representative. Under state law, death record information becomes available to the general public 50 years after the date of death.
Are Death Records Public in Nevada?
No. Nevada is a closed-record state for death certificates. Certified copies are confidential by law and are released only to a qualified applicant who can show a direct relationship to the deceased.
This is the opposite of an open-record state, where anyone can buy a certified copy of any death certificate. In Nevada, the general public cannot freely purchase a certified death record.
Under NRS 440.125, the State Registrar must protect the security and confidentiality of vital statistics. Death record information is opened to the public only 50 years after the date of death.
Until that 50-year window passes, access is limited to qualified applicants. People without a qualifying relationship who need a sealed record generally must petition a court and show a tangible interest in the document.
For how Nevada compares to other states, see our Death Records by State guide.
Who Can Request a Nevada Death Record?
Only a qualified applicant may request a certified Nevada death certificate. State rules limit certified copies to people with a direct, provable connection to the person named on the record.

Qualified applicants generally include:
- The immediate family of the deceased, related by blood or marriage (such as a spouse, parent, adult child, or sibling)
- A legal guardian of the deceased
- A legal representative acting on behalf of the family or estate
- A person with a court order or another requirement imposed by law
To prove eligibility, you must submit a valid government-issued photo ID, such as a driver license, state ID card, or passport. If you order on behalf of an estate or under a legal authority, you may also need supporting documents that show your relationship or authority.
Because the cause of death and other sensitive details sit on the certificate, Nevada keeps the entire record restricted to these qualified applicants rather than selling copies to the public.
How to Get a Nevada Death Certificate
Certified Nevada death certificates are issued by the Nevada Office of Vital Records, part of the Division of Public and Behavioral Health (DPBH). Many county and district health offices also issue certified copies for deaths that occurred in their jurisdiction.
You can request a certified copy in a few ways:
- Online or by phone through the state authorized vendor (VitalChek), which is the fastest option
- By mail, by completing a death certificate application and sending in proper identification and payment
- In person or by mail at a county or local health office for deaths recorded in that county
The fee is $25 per certified copy if the death occurred in Carson, Clark, Douglas, Lyon, Mineral, or Washoe County, and $22 per copy in all other Nevada counties. The state accepts checks, money orders, cashier checks, and credit cards. Do not mail cash.
Processing times for mailed requests typically run about four to six weeks, though online orders are usually faster. You can reach the Office of Vital Records at (775) 684-4242 to confirm current fees and timing before you send a request.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Nevada?
No. In Nevada the cause of death is not separately public. It is printed on the certified death certificate, and because the entire certificate is confidential, the cause of death is shielded from the general public.

Only qualified applicants who receive a certified copy can see the cause-of-death information on the record. This keeps sensitive medical details out of public circulation.
This treatment is common across states that restrict certified death records. For a national overview of how this information is handled, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?.
How Far Back Do Nevada Death Records Go?
Nevada death records held by the state become open to the public 50 years after the date of death. Once a record crosses that 50-year line, the confidentiality restriction in NRS 440.125 no longer applies, and the information may be released more broadly.
Statewide death registration in Nevada dates back to the early 1900s, so older historical death records exist in state and archival holdings. These older records are the ones most likely to be accessible for genealogy and historical research once they pass the 50-year threshold.
At the national level, there is no federal death-records database. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention through its National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) confirms that death certificates are issued by individual states, not the federal government.
For broader searches, the Social Security Administration maintains a public version of its Death Master File, but under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 that public file excludes deaths that occurred within the last three calendar years.
Nevada Death Records at a Glance
| Question | Nevada answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed record (confidential) |
| Waiting period until public | 50 years after date of death |
| Who can request a certified copy | Immediate family, legal guardian, or legal representative |
| Fee per certified copy | $25 (six listed counties) or $22 (all other counties) |
| Issuing office | Nevada Office of Vital Records (DPBH) |
| Governing statute | NRS 440.125 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in Nevada and is not legal advice. Rules, fees, and processing times change, and eligibility can depend on your specific situation. Always verify the current requirements with the Nevada Office of Vital Records or the relevant county office before relying on this information.
Sources
This page draws on the Nevada Revised Statutes (Chapter 440, Vital Statistics), the Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health Office of Vital Records, the CDC National Center for Health Statistics, and the Social Security Administration; see the linked sources for details.
Sources and References
- Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 440 - Vital Statistics (NRS 440.125, security and confidentiality of vital statistics; 50-year release of death certificate information)(leg.state.nv.us).gov
- Nevada Division of Public and Behavioral Health - Birth and Death Vital Records (Office of Vital Records, qualified applicant, fees, ordering)(dpbh.nv.gov).gov
- Nevada DPBH - Birth/Death Vital Records FAQs (fees, ordering methods, processing)(dpbh.nv.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records (records issued by states, no federal database)(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File / Limited Access DMF (public file excludes deaths within the last three calendar years, Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013)(ssa.gov).gov