North Dakota
How to Find a Cause of Death in North Dakota (2026)

To find someone's cause of death in North Dakota, you usually need the complete death record from North Dakota Vital Records, because the cause of death is printed only on that version. It is not public. Only a relative, an authorized representative, a funeral director, or someone acting by court order can obtain the full record.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in North Dakota?
To find someone's cause of death in North Dakota, request the complete death record from North Dakota Health and Human Services, Vital Records, if you are an eligible requester. The cause of death is printed only on that complete version of the certificate.
If you are not eligible for the full record, you generally cannot get an official cause of death directly from the state. In that situation, people rely on obituaries, newspaper reports, or family knowledge.
For unexplained or violent deaths, a county coroner or the State Forensic Examiner determines the cause. Their findings flow onto the death certificate and may also exist in a separate investigation or autopsy file.
To compare how other states handle this, see our Death Records by State hub.
Is the Cause of Death Public in North Dakota?
No. The cause of death is not public in North Dakota. The state issues a public informational copy of a death record, but that copy deliberately excludes the cause of death and the Social Security number.

North Dakota uses a hybrid model under the Health Statistics Act, North Dakota Century Code chapter 23-02.1. Anyone can buy an informational copy that confirms the fact of death and basic demographic facts. Only eligible requesters can obtain the complete record that shows the cause of death.
There is no fixed waiting period that flips the cause of death into the public column. Because a redacted informational copy is already available, the full cause-of-death record simply stays restricted to eligible requesters.
For the broader rule across states, see Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death lives in two main places in North Dakota. The first is the medical certification section of the death certificate. The second is the file of the coroner or State Forensic Examiner when a death is investigated.
A certifying physician, physician assistant, nurse practitioner, or coroner completes the medical certification. That entry states the immediate cause, the underlying conditions, and the manner of death. It is part of the complete death record.
When a death is sudden, violent, unattended, or suspicious, a county coroner investigates, and the State Forensic Examiner may perform an autopsy under North Dakota Century Code section 23-01-05.4. The autopsy report is a separate document that explains the medical findings behind the certified cause.
The death certificate gives the short, official cause. An autopsy report gives the detailed medical reasoning, and it is usually released only to relatives or by legal authority.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
To request a record that shows the cause of death, order a complete death record from North Dakota Vital Records by mail, online, or in person. You must show that you qualify as an eligible requester.

Eligible requesters include a relative, an authorized representative, a funeral director who reported the death, or a person acting by order of a court. North Dakota defines a relative as a current or surviving spouse, parent or legal guardian, child, grandparent, grandchild, or genetic sibling.
A certified copy costs $15.00 for the first copy and $10.00 for each additional copy ordered at the same time. You will need to provide identification and details about the deceased and your relationship.
If you only need to confirm a Social Security number for a financial matter, a facts-of-death copy is available, but it does not include the cause of death. Only the complete record carries the cause.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older or historical North Dakota deaths, the cause of death is usually easiest to find through the death certificate once a relative or researcher can lawfully obtain it. North Dakota does not publish a blanket time rule that opens the cause of death to everyone after a set number of years.
Genealogists often start with obituaries and contemporary newspaper coverage, which frequently describe the circumstances of a death. State and local historical and library collections can help locate these published accounts.
The Social Security Death Index is useful for confirming the fact and date of death for many twentieth-century deaths. It does not list the cause of death, so you still need the certificate or an obituary for that detail.
For very old records, contact North Dakota Vital Records or the relevant county to ask how to access historical death certificates and what eligibility rules apply.
North Dakota Cause-of-Death Facts
| Question | North Dakota |
|---|---|
| Is cause of death public? | No. It appears only on the complete (restricted) record |
| Who can access it? | A relative, authorized representative, funeral director, or by court order |
| Where it is recorded | Medical certification on the death certificate; coroner or autopsy file |
| Main source | North Dakota HHS, Vital Records; county coroner or State Forensic Examiner |

Disclaimer: This article is general information, not legal advice. Access rules and fees can change. Confirm the current requirements with North Dakota Health and Human Services, Vital Records, before you rely on them.
Sources
This page draws on North Dakota Health and Human Services, Vital Records, the North Dakota Century Code, and federal summaries of North Dakota's medical examiner and coroner laws.
Back to North Dakota Death Records.
Sources and References
- North Dakota HHS, Vital Records: Certified Copies of Death Records(hhs.nd.gov).gov
- North Dakota HHS, Vital Records(hhs.nd.gov).gov
- North Dakota Century Code chapter 23-02.1 (Health Statistics Act)(ndlegis.gov).gov
- North Dakota Century Code section 23-01-05.4 (State Forensic Examiner)(ndlegis.gov).gov
- CDC: North Dakota Coroner/Medical Examiner Laws(cdc.gov).gov