New Mexico
New Mexico Death Records: Are They Public + How to Get Them

New Mexico is a closed-record state for death certificates. Only the deceased person's immediate family or someone who can show a tangible legal interest may obtain a certified copy. Death records become open public records 50 years after the date of death under New Mexico's Vital Statistics Act.
Are Death Records Public in New Mexico?
No. New Mexico is a closed-record state for death certificates. Access is restricted to the deceased person's immediate family or to someone who can present tangible proof of a legal interest in the record.
This rule comes from New Mexico's Vital Statistics Act. The state registrar keeps death records confidential to protect families and to guard against identity theft and fraud.
The records do not stay restricted forever. New Mexico law provides that death records in the custody of the state registrar become open public records once 50 years have passed since the date of death.
That 50-year line is one of the shorter waiting periods in the country. Some states keep death records restricted for 75 or 100 years, so New Mexico opens its older records relatively quickly.
For broader context, see our overview of Death Records by State and our explainer on whether cause of death records are public.
Who Can Request a New Mexico Death Record?
Only an eligible requester can buy a certified copy of a recent New Mexico death certificate. The Bureau of Vital Records & Health Statistics limits access to immediate family members and to people with a tangible legal interest.

New Mexico defines immediate family as the deceased person's mother, father, sibling, child, current spouse, or maternal or paternal grandparent. A paternal grandparent qualifies only if the father is listed on the record.
A tangible legal interest covers people who need the record for a direct, documented reason. Examples include the estate's personal representative, an attorney handling the estate, or someone settling insurance, property, or benefits tied to the death.
Every applicant must submit a photocopy of a current government-issued photo ID, such as a driver's license, state ID, or passport. Requests without valid ID are returned unprocessed.
Once a record is more than 50 years old, these eligibility limits fall away and anyone may request a copy as a public record.
How to Get a New Mexico Death Certificate
You can order a New Mexico death certificate by mail, in person, or through the state's authorized online vendor. The issuing office is the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records & Health Statistics in Santa Fe.
The fee is $5.00 per certified copy. This is a non-refundable search fee, so you pay it even if the office cannot locate a matching record.
By mail: Send a completed application or signed letter, a photocopy of your government-issued photo ID, and the fee to New Mexico Vital Records, PO Box 26110, Santa Fe, NM 87502. Mail requests are the slowest option and processing time varies by volume.
In person: Visit the Santa Fe office at 2554 Camino Entrada, open Monday through Friday during posted hours. In-person service is generally the fastest way to get a certified copy.
Online: Order through VitalChek, the state's authorized expediting service. Expedited orders carry additional service and shipping charges on top of the $5.00 record fee, with delivery options ranging from regular mail to next-day air.
Always confirm current fees, hours, and accepted ID directly with the bureau before you send payment, because state agencies update these details periodically.
Is the Cause of Death Public in New Mexico?
The cause of death is printed on the certified New Mexico death certificate, and that full certificate is released only to eligible requesters. It is not posted publicly or sold to the general public during the 50-year restriction period.

So for a recent death, only immediate family or someone with a tangible legal interest can obtain a document showing the cause of death. After 50 years, the record opens and the cause of death on it becomes publicly available like the rest of the certificate.
Autopsy reports follow a separate track from the vital record. To learn how those are handled, see our guides on autopsies as public records and cause of death records.
How Far Back Do New Mexico Death Records Go?
New Mexico's statewide death registration began in 1919, and the Bureau of Vital Records & Health Statistics holds certificates from that year forward. Records that are at least 50 years old are open to the public, while newer ones stay restricted.
For deaths before 1919, or for genealogical research, older records may be available through the New Mexico State Records Center and Archives rather than the vital records bureau.
On the national level, there is no federal death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death certificates are issued by the states, not by the federal government, so each request goes to the state where the death occurred.
Researchers also use the Social Security Death Master File, but the public version maintained by the Social Security Administration excludes deaths within the most recent three calendar years under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013. For very recent deaths, the state death certificate remains the authoritative source.
New Mexico Death Records at a Glance
| Question | New Mexico answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed (restricted access) |
| When do records become public? | 50 years after the date of death |
| Who can request a recent record? | Immediate family or someone with a tangible legal interest |
| Cost of a certified copy | $5.00 (non-refundable search fee) |
| Issuing office | New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records & Health Statistics (Santa Fe) |
| Governing statute | NM Stat. 24-14-27 (Vital Statistics Act) |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about access to New Mexico death records, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times change, and individual situations vary. Always confirm current requirements with the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records & Health Statistics or consult a licensed attorney before acting.
Sources
This page draws on the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records & Health Statistics, the New Mexico Vital Statistics Act, and federal guidance from the CDC and the Social Security Administration, all listed below.
Sources and References
- New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records & Health Statistics - Death Certificates(nmhealth.org).gov
- New Mexico Vital Records Program(nmhealth.org).gov
- NM Stat. 24-14-27 - Disclosure of records (Vital Statistics Act)(nmhealth.org).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - National Vital Statistics System(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File(ssa.gov).gov