New Mexico
How to Get a New Mexico Death Certificate (2026)

You get a New Mexico death certificate from the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics in Santa Fe. Only immediate family members or those with a legal interest may obtain a certified copy. Each certified copy costs $5, including the record search.
How Do You Get a Death Certificate in New Mexico?
You get a New Mexico death certificate from the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics, the state office that holds and issues death records. Local public health offices and county clerks cannot issue death certificates; only the Santa Fe bureau can.
There are three ways to request a certified copy.
By Mail
Send a completed application or signed letter, a photocopy of your government-issued photo ID, and a $5 check or money order made payable to "New Mexico Vital Records." Mail your request to New Mexico Vital Records, Post Office Box 26110, Santa Fe, NM 87502. Do not send cash.
In Person
Visit the bureau at 2554 Camino Entrada, Santa Fe, NM 87505, Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Bring your photo ID and the $5 fee per copy.
Online
You can order online through VitalChek, the state-authorized vendor. VitalChek adds its own processing and delivery charges on top of the state fee.
Who Is Eligible to Request a New Mexico Death Certificate?
Only the deceased person's immediate family members or those with a documented legal interest may obtain a certified New Mexico death certificate. New Mexico death certificates are restricted-access records, not open public documents.

Immediate family means the mother, father, sibling, child, current spouse, or maternal or paternal grandparent of the deceased. A paternal grandparent qualifies only if the father is listed on the record.
People with a tangible legal interest, such as an estate representative, attorney, or someone settling the decedent's affairs, may also qualify by providing proof of that interest. Anyone may obtain a copy once the record becomes public, which happens 50 years after the date of death.
New Mexico Death Certificate Cost and Processing Time
A certified New Mexico death certificate costs $5, and that fee includes the search for the record. Each additional copy ordered at the same time is also $5.
The $5 search fee is non-refundable even if no record is found on file. Mail and in-person requests are processed by the bureau, while online orders are handled through VitalChek's standard or expedited service tiers.
VitalChek orders are typically processed in 3 to 5 business days, with delivery by regular mail or next-day air depending on the option you select. Mail-in processing times vary with bureau volume, so allow extra time and order early if you need certificates quickly.
Certified vs Informational Copy in New Mexico
New Mexico issues certified death certificates only. Unlike some states, it does not offer a separate "informational" copy of a death record to the general public.

A certified copy is the official legal document, printed on secure paper, that you need for settling an estate, claiming life insurance or benefits, closing financial accounts, and transferring property. Because the record is restricted, the certified copy is reserved for eligible family members and those with a legal interest.
If you only need basic facts and are not eligible for a certified copy, the record itself remains closed until 50 years after the death, at which point it becomes a public record.
How to Get Additional or Replacement Copies
You get additional or replacement New Mexico death certificates the same way you ordered the first one, by paying $5 for each copy. There is no discount for ordering multiple copies; every certified copy is $5.

Ordering several copies at the same time is usually the most efficient approach, since settling an estate often requires multiple originals for banks, insurers, and government agencies. If you need replacements later, simply submit a new request by mail, in person, or through VitalChek with the standard fee and your photo ID.
| Item | New Mexico |
|---|---|
| Issuing office | Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics (Santa Fe) |
| First certified copy fee | $5 (includes record search) |
| Each additional copy | $5 |
| Processing time | 3 to 5 business days (VitalChek); varies by mail |
| Eligibility | Immediate family or legal interest only |
Disclaimer: This page provides general information, not legal advice. Fees, eligibility rules, and processing times can change. Always confirm current requirements with the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics before submitting a request.
Sources
This guide draws on the New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics and the New Mexico Department of Health.
For the broader rules on access, see New Mexico Death Records or browse Death Records by State.
Sources and References
- New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics - Death Certificates(nmhealth.org).gov
- New Mexico Bureau of Vital Records and Health Statistics - Vital Records(nmhealth.org).gov
- New Mexico Department of Health(nmhealth.org).gov