Ohio
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Ohio? (2026)

A final autopsy report is a public record in Ohio. Under Ohio Revised Code 313.10, the coroner's detailed autopsy findings and conclusions are open to any person who asks in writing. But preliminary notes, photographs, suicide notes, and certain lab reports are exempt, and only next of kin, the estate, or an insurer can obtain the full file.
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Ohio?
Yes. The final autopsy report is a public record in Ohio. Under Ohio Revised Code 313.10, the coroner's detailed descriptions of the observations written during the autopsy and the conclusions drawn from them are open to inspection by the public.
Any person may receive a copy upon a written request. You do not have to be a relative or show a reason to get the final report.
But the statute carves out several items that are not public. These include preliminary autopsy and investigative notes and findings, photographs of the decedent, suicide notes, medical and psychiatric records, confidential law-enforcement investigatory records, and laboratory reports generated from the analysis of physical evidence.
So the general public can get the finished autopsy report, but not the supporting notes, images, or evidence-based lab work. That fuller file is reserved for a narrow set of requesters.
Who Performs Autopsies in Ohio?
Ohio uses a county-based coroner system. Under Ohio Revised Code 313.01 and as summarized by the CDC, each county elects a coroner who must be a physician licensed in Ohio. Two counties differ: Cuyahoga County and Summit County have abolished the coroner office by local ordinance and created a medical examiner instead.

The coroner or a deputy coroner who is a licensed physician or pathologist performs the autopsy. There is no statewide medical examiner in Ohio.
When an Autopsy Happens
An autopsy is not done for every death. Under Ohio Revised Code 313.12, the coroner must be notified when a person dies from criminal or other violent means, by casualty, by suicide, or in any suspicious or unusual manner. The coroner is also notified when a person dies suddenly while in apparent good health.
The coroner then decides whether an autopsy is needed to determine the cause and manner of death. Most natural deaths under a doctor's care do not result in an autopsy or a coroner's case.
Who Can Request an Ohio Autopsy Report?
Any member of the public can request the final autopsy report. The wider file, including the exempt notes, photos, and lab reports, is limited to specific requesters under Ohio Revised Code 313.10.
The next of kin of the decedent may request copies of the full records. If there is no surviving next of kin, or if all next of kin have died without making a request, the representative of the decedent's estate may request the full records instead. An insurer that submits a written request may also obtain a copy of the records.
Journalists have a middle tier. A journalist may submit a written request to view suicide notes, photographs of the decedent, and preliminary autopsy and investigative notes and findings, but may not copy those items.
The coroner of the county where the death was pronounced is responsible for releasing the public records relating to that death.
How to Get an Autopsy or Toxicology Report in Ohio
You request an Ohio autopsy or toxicology report from the county coroner or medical examiner office where the death was pronounced. Ohio Revised Code 313.10 requires a written request for the public record.

Follow these steps:
- Identify the correct county. Records are released by the coroner or medical examiner of the county where the death occurred or was pronounced.
- Submit a written request. Include the decedent's full name, date of death, and the case number if you have one.
- State your relationship if you need the full file. Next of kin, the estate representative, and insurers should note their status to access exempt portions.
- Pay any copy fee. Ohio's public records law generally allows only the actual cost of copies, so fees are usually a small per-page charge.
Final autopsy reports and toxicology results can take weeks to months because lab testing and the coroner's review must finish first. If the death is part of an open homicide investigation, the coroner may withhold records as confidential law-enforcement investigatory records until the case closes. To learn more about access across the country, see Are Autopsies Public Records?.
Autopsy Report vs Death Certificate in Ohio
An autopsy report and a death certificate are two different documents. The autopsy report is the coroner's detailed examination findings. The death certificate is the official vital record filed with the state that records the legal cause and manner of death on a single line.
The death certificate is short and standardized. The autopsy report can run many pages and explains how the coroner reached the cause-of-death conclusion shown on the certificate.
They are also requested from different places. Death certificates come from the Ohio Department of Health or a local registrar, while autopsy reports come from the county coroner or medical examiner. For certificates, see Ohio Death Records.
Ohio Autopsy Report Facts
| Item | Ohio |
|---|---|
| Final report public? | Yes, a public record under Ohio Rev. Code 313.10 |
| Who can request final report | Any person, by written request |
| Who can get the full file | Next of kin, estate representative, insurer |
| Death investigation system | County-based coroner (medical examiner in Cuyahoga and Summit counties) |
| Where to request | County coroner or medical examiner where death was pronounced |
| Typical fee | Actual cost of copies (small per-page charge) |
| Open-case exemption | May be withheld as confidential law-enforcement record |
| Governing law | Ohio Rev. Code 313.10 and 313.12 |

Disclaimer: This article is general information, not legal advice. Public records access can vary by county office and change over time. Confirm current procedures and fees with the county coroner or medical examiner that holds the record.
Sources
This article cites the Ohio Revised Code and the CDC's summary of Ohio's coroner and medical examiner laws.
Sources and References
- Ohio Rev. Code 313.10 - Coroner Records to Be Public(codes.ohio.gov).gov
- Ohio Rev. Code 313.12 - Notice to Coroner of Violent, Suspicious, or Sudden Death(codes.ohio.gov).gov
- Ohio Rev. Code 313.01 - County Coroner(codes.ohio.gov).gov
- CDC - Ohio Coroner/Medical Examiner Laws(cdc.gov).gov