Nevada
How to Find a Cause of Death in Nevada (2026 Guide)

You find someone's cause of death in Nevada on the medical certification section of their death certificate, and in the coroner or medical examiner's autopsy report for investigated deaths. Nevada is a closed-record state, so the certified death certificate is confidential and released only to qualified family or legal representatives until 50 years after the death.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Nevada?
You find someone's cause of death in Nevada by obtaining the document that records it: the death certificate or, for an investigated death, the autopsy report. The certifying physician, advanced practice registered nurse, or coroner enters the cause in the medical certification portion of the certificate.
If you are a qualified applicant, the most direct route is a certified death certificate from the Nevada Office of Vital Records. The cause of death is printed on that certified copy.
If you are not eligible for the certificate, you can still often learn the cause through an obituary, news coverage, a funeral home, or a redacted autopsy report from the county coroner or medical examiner.
For older deaths, the record eventually opens to the public, and genealogy archives may carry the cause once the confidentiality window has passed.
To understand who qualifies and how Nevada handles death records overall, start with our Nevada Death Records guide.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Nevada?
No, not on the death certificate itself. Because Nevada is a closed-record state, the entire certified death certificate, including the cause of death, is confidential and released only to qualified applicants.

Under NRS 440.125, the State Registrar must protect the confidentiality of vital statistics, and death record information opens to the general public only 50 years after the date of death.
So the cause of death is not freely available to the public through the certificate while that 50-year window is still running. Only the registrant, a direct family member by blood or marriage, a guardian, or a legal representative with a direct and tangible interest can obtain the certified record.
That said, the autopsy report follows a different rule. In Nevada, coroner and medical examiner autopsy reports are treated as public records, with private medical details redacted, which makes the autopsy a separate way to learn a cause of death.
For how this varies nationwide, see Are Cause of Death Records Public?
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death lives in two main documents in Nevada: the death certificate and, for investigated deaths, the autopsy report.
The death certificate
The death certificate carries the official cause of death in its medical certification section. Under NRS 440.380, the certifier must state the cause of death, showing the disease or the sequence of conditions that resulted in death, listing the primary cause first and any contributory or secondary cause.
A certifying physician or APRN must complete the cause-of-death and certification portions within 24 hours of being assigned as the certifier. This is the legal, primary record of why the person died.
The autopsy report
When a death is sudden, violent, or unexplained, the county coroner or medical examiner investigates and a forensic pathologist may perform an autopsy. The resulting report states the cause and manner of death in detail.
The autopsy report is a separate public record from the confidential certificate, which is why it is often the route the general public uses to learn a cause of death in Nevada.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
The way you request a cause-of-death record depends on which document you need and whether you are a qualified applicant.

Death certificate (qualified applicants)
If you are eligible, request a certified copy from the Nevada Office of Vital Records in Carson City, online through the state-authorized vendor, by mail, or in person. You must show photo identification and proof of your relationship to the deceased. Full step-by-step instructions are on our Nevada death certificate page.
Autopsy report (coroner or medical examiner)
For an investigated death, contact the coroner or medical examiner in the county where the death occurred. Clark County and Washoe County operate regional medical examiner offices. The office releases a redacted public copy once the case is closed, and the legal next of kin or a court order can unlock the full report.
Obituaries and news
Obituaries and newspaper reporting often state or strongly imply a cause of death and are freely available with no eligibility requirement. These are usually the fastest informal route.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older Nevada deaths, the cause of death becomes easier to find once the record loses its confidential status. Death record information opens to the public 50 years after the date of death under NRS 440.125.

After that window, the death certificate, including the cause of death, can be accessed as a public or genealogical record. State and county archives and genealogy collections may hold these older records.
For deaths that occurred before July 1, 1911, the state office does not hold the record. Contact the County Recorder in the county where the death took place.
The Social Security Death Index is useful for confirming that a death occurred and its date, but it does not include the cause of death. It is a starting point, not a source for how someone died.
| Question | Nevada |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Restricted on the certificate; public 50 years after death |
| Who can access the certified certificate? | Registrant, family by blood or marriage, guardian, or legal representative |
| Where is the cause of death recorded? | Medical certification section of the death certificate; autopsy report |
| Main source for the cause of death | Nevada Office of Vital Records; county coroner or medical examiner |
Disclaimer: This page provides general information, not legal advice. Access rules, fees, and processing times change. Always confirm current requirements directly with the Nevada Office of Vital Records or the relevant county coroner or medical examiner before you rely on them.
Sources
This page draws on the Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 440 (Vital Statistics) and Chapter 259 (Coroners), published by the Nevada Legislature.
Up to Nevada Death Records and the hub Death Records by State.
Sources and References
- NRS Chapter 440 Vital Statistics (death registration, medical certificate of death, confidentiality)(leg.state.nv.us).gov
- NRS 440.380 Medical certificate of death: contents and cause of death(leg.state.nv.us).gov
- NRS Chapter 259 Coroners (investigation into cause of death; postmortem examination)(leg.state.nv.us).gov
- Death Certificates, Southern Nevada Health District Vital Records(southernnevadahealthdistrict.org).gov