North Carolina
North Carolina Death Records: Are They Public and How to Get Them

North Carolina restricts only CERTIFIED death certificates; it is not a flatly closed-record state. A certified copy is limited to the person named, a spouse, sibling, direct ancestor or descendant, stepparent or stepchild, someone with a legal property or personal-rights interest, or an authorized agent or attorney. But under N.C.G.S. 130A-93(a) the register of deeds or State Registrar furnishes a copy or abstract of a vital record "to any person upon request," so anyone can obtain an uncertified (informational) copy with no ID. That uncertified copy still shows the cause of death; it omits only the Social Security Number.
Are Death Records Public in North Carolina?
Partly. North Carolina is not a flatly closed-record state. Under N.C.G.S. 130A-93(a), the register of deeds or the State Registrar provides a copy or abstract of a vital record to any person upon request, except for a narrow set of confidential subsections. That means a member of the public can obtain an uncertified, informational copy of a death record with no ID and no proof of relationship.
What is restricted is the certified copy, the kind with an official seal used for estates, insurance, and legal matters. Only people with a defined relationship to the deceased or a legal interest in the record may obtain a certified copy.
So the practical distinction is the seal, not the underlying facts. An uncertified copy is broadly available and still shows the cause of death; it omits only the Social Security Number. A certified copy stays relationship-restricted.
For a state-by-state comparison, see Death Records by State.
Who Can Request a North Carolina Death Record?
Anyone can request an uncertified, informational copy. Under N.C.G.S. 130A-93(a), the register of deeds and the State Registrar furnish copies or abstracts of vital records to any person upon request, so an uncertified copy carries no eligibility test and no ID requirement. It is marked as not valid for identity or legal purposes.

A certified copy is different. Only people on a specific eligibility list may obtain a certified North Carolina death certificate. Under North Carolina General Statute 130A-93, that list includes the person's spouse, sibling, direct ancestor (such as a parent or grandparent), direct descendant (such as a child or grandchild), stepparent, or stepchild.
It also includes anyone seeking the record to make a legal determination of personal or property rights, and an authorized agent, attorney, or legal representative of an eligible person. A funeral director or funeral service licensee is also entitled to a certified copy upon request.
Every certified request requires a signed application and a legible copy of the requester's valid government photo ID, such as a driver's license, passport, or military ID. Certified applications submitted without acceptable identification are rejected. Uncertified informational copies do not carry that ID requirement.
How to Get a North Carolina Death Certificate
Certified North Carolina death certificates are issued by NC Vital Records, part of the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services. You can also order from the Register of Deeds in the county where the death occurred.
You have several ways to request a copy:
- Online or phone: Orders are processed through the state's authorized vendor, VitalChek, by phone or web.
- In person: By appointment at the NC Vital Records office in Raleigh during posted hours, with an additional expedited fee.
- Mail: Send a completed application, a copy of your photo ID, and payment to NC Vital Records, 1903 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1903.
- County Register of Deeds: In the county where the death took place.
The fee is $24 for a search that includes one copy, charged per three-year period searched. Each additional copy of the same record is $15. The search fee is nonrefundable even if no record is found, so it helps to know the approximate date of death.
Processing times vary by order type and volume. The state publishes current processing dates for regular, expedited, and VitalChek orders, so check those before assuming a timeline. Payment by mail should be a money order or certified check made payable to NC Vital Records.
Is the Cause of Death Public in North Carolina?
Largely yes. The cause of death is recorded on the death certificate, and because North Carolina furnishes uncertified copies of vital records to any person upon request under N.C.G.S. 130A-93(a), the cause of death appears on the uncertified copy a member of the public can obtain. The uncertified copy omits only the Social Security Number, not the cause of death.

What stays restricted is the certified copy showing the cause of death. Only the eligible requesters listed in N.C.G.S. 130A-93, such as close family, legal representatives, and those with a legal interest, can obtain a certified copy. But the general public is not blocked from learning the cause of death itself, since an uncertified copy displaying it is available to anyone.
Related autopsy and inquest material is handled separately. To understand how those records are treated, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?.
How Far Back Do North Carolina Death Records Go?
NC Vital Records holds statewide death records beginning in 1930. For deaths before 1930, researchers often turn to the North Carolina State Archives and county Register of Deeds offices, which may hold earlier local records and indices.
Genealogists frequently combine these state and county sources with national reference points. There is no federal death-records database; under federal practice confirmed by the CDC's National Center for Health Statistics, death records are issued and held at the state level.
For deaths that have already occurred, the Social Security Administration maintains a public Death Master File, but the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 excludes deaths within the most recent three calendar years from that public file. That national index is a finding aid only and is not a substitute for a certified North Carolina certificate.
For a related vital record covered by similar access rules, see Are Birth Certificates Public Records?.
North Carolina Death Records at a Glance
| Question | North Carolina answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Restricted-certified, open-uncertified: certified copies limited; uncertified copies available to anyone |
| Who can request an uncertified copy? | Any person, with no ID and no proof of relationship (N.C.G.S. 130A-93(a)) |
| Who can request a certified copy? | Spouse, sibling, direct ancestor or descendant, stepparent, stepchild, legal representative, or someone with a legal personal or property interest |
| Does the cause of death show on an uncertified copy? | Yes; the uncertified copy omits only the Social Security Number |
| Fee | $24 (search plus one copy) per three-year period; $15 each additional copy |
| Issuing office | NC Vital Records (NCDHHS), Raleigh |
| Governing statute | N.C.G.S. 130A-93 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about records access in North Carolina and is not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and procedures can change. Always confirm current requirements with NC Vital Records or the county Register of Deeds before relying on the details here.
Sources
This article draws on official North Carolina and federal government sources, listed below.
Sources and References
- NC Vital Records (NCDHHS): Order a Certificate(vitalrecords.nc.gov).gov
- NC Vital Records (NCDHHS): Fees and Payment(vitalrecords.nc.gov).gov
- N.C.G.S. 130A-93, Access to vital records; copies(ncleg.gov).gov
- CDC NCHS: Where to Write for North Carolina Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration: Death Master File(ssa.gov).gov