New Mexico
How to Find a Cause of Death in New Mexico (2026)

You find someone's cause of death in New Mexico from the medical certification on the death certificate or from an Office of the Medical Investigator (OMI) report. The cause-of-death line on a recent certificate is restricted to eligible requesters, but OMI autopsy and findings reports are public records, and certificates become fully public 50 years after death.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in New Mexico?
You find a cause of death in New Mexico by getting the death certificate or an Office of the Medical Investigator (OMI) report, since those are the documents that record the official cause. The certificate carries the medical certification line, and OMI reports explain investigated deaths in more detail.
For a recent death, the certificate is restricted. Only the deceased person's immediate family or someone with a tangible legal interest can buy a certified copy that shows the cause.
If the death was sudden, violent, or unexplained, OMI usually investigates and produces reports that are public records. That gives the public a separate, lawful way to learn the cause.
Many people also learn a cause of death informally, through an obituary, a funeral notice, or a local newspaper. Those sources are easy to access but are not official records.
For the full access rules, see our parent guide to New Mexico Death Records.
Is the Cause of Death Public in New Mexico?
Not on a recent death certificate. New Mexico is a closed-record state, so the cause-of-death line on a certified certificate is released only to eligible requesters, not to the general public.

This ties directly to the certificate access rule. Because the whole certificate is restricted, the cause of death printed on it is restricted with it.
There is an important exception. When a death falls under OMI jurisdiction, the autopsy report, report of findings, and toxicology report are public records under New Mexicos Inspection of Public Records Act (IPRA). Those reports state the cause of death and are available to people outside the immediate family.
Time also opens the door. Under NM Stat. 24-14-27, death records become open public records 50 years after the date of death, at which point the cause of death on the certificate is public to anyone. For a wider view, read Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death lives in two main places in New Mexico: the death certificate and the OMI reports. Knowing which document you need shapes how you request it.
On the Death Certificate
Every New Mexico death certificate has a medical certification section completed by a physician or the medical investigator. This section lists the immediate cause of death and any underlying conditions that led to it.
The certificate is the official, legal record of the cause. It is what estates, insurers, and courts rely on.
In the OMI Autopsy and Findings Reports
For deaths that OMI investigates, the office produces three documents: the autopsy report, the report of findings, and the toxicology report. The report of findings is a one-page summary that contains the same information listed on the death certificate.
These reports often give the fullest explanation of how someone died. Because they are public records in OMI cases, they are a key route for people who are not eligible to buy the certificate.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
You request cause-of-death records from one of two state offices, depending on the document you need. The choice comes down to whether you want the certificate or an OMI report.

To get the death certificate, apply to the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics in Santa Fe. You can apply by mail, in person, or through the state-authorized online vendor, with a government-issued photo ID and a $5 fee per certified copy. You must be an eligible requester. See our step-by-step guide to the New Mexico death certificate.
To get an OMI report, submit a records request to the Office of the Medical Investigator at the University of New Mexico. The legal next of kin receives one free copy of all reports; other requesters pay copying and delivery fees. Read our page on New Mexico autopsy reports for the full process.
The report of findings is usually ready about 10 working days after the death certificate is released. The full autopsy and toxicology reports can take up to 12 weeks.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older deaths, the cause of death becomes easier to find once the record opens to the public. Under NM Stat. 24-14-27, a death certificate in the custody of the state registrar becomes an open public record 50 years after the date of death.

After that window, anyone can request the certificate and see the cause-of-death line without proving a family or legal interest. That makes the 50-year mark a turning point for genealogy and historical research.
For very old deaths, state archives and library collections may hold indexes and copies. Newspaper obituaries from the period can also describe the cause in plain language.
The Social Security Death Index is useful for confirming the fact and date of death, but it does not list a cause. Treat it as a starting point that points you toward the certificate or an OMI report.
| Question | New Mexico |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Restricted on a recent certificate; public 50 years after death |
| Who can access it? | Immediate family or someone with a tangible legal interest |
| Where is it recorded? | Medical certification on the death certificate; OMI reports |
| Main source | Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics; Office of the Medical Investigator |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Access rules and fees can change, so verify the current requirements with the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics or the Office of the Medical Investigator before you request a record.
Sources
This guide draws on the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics, the University of New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator, and the New Mexico Vital Statistics Act (NM Stat. 24-14-27).
Sources and References
- New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics - Death Certificates(nmhealth.org).gov
- New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator - Reports FAQ(hsc.unm.edu).gov
- New Mexico Office of the Medical Investigator - For Families(hsc.unm.edu).gov
- New Mexico Vital Statistics Act, NM Stat. 24-14-27 (records open 50 years after death)(nmonesource.com).gov