Ohio
How to Find a Cause of Death in Ohio (2026)

You find someone's cause of death in Ohio on their death certificate, which lists the medical cause of death. Ohio is an open-record state, so the cause of death is public and anyone may buy a certified copy from the Ohio Department of Health. For deaths a coroner investigated, the autopsy report is also a public record.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Ohio?
You find someone's cause of death in Ohio by obtaining their death certificate, which records the medical cause of death. Because Ohio is an open-record state, the cause of death is public and you do not need to be a relative to access it.
There are several practical routes. The most direct is to buy a certified or informational copy of the death certificate from the Ohio Department of Health (ODH) Bureau of Vital Statistics or a local health department.
If a county coroner investigated the death, you can also request the coroner's record, including the autopsy report. Beyond the official records, an obituary or newspaper account sometimes states the cause, and historical and genealogy indexes can help for older deaths.
For a general overview of how access works across the country, see our guide on whether cause of death records are public.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Ohio?
Yes. The cause of death is public in Ohio because death certificates are open public records under state law. The same access rule that makes the certificate available to anyone also makes the cause-of-death line available.

Ohio does not restrict death certificates to family members or people with a legal interest. Under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 3705 and the state public-records law, R.C. 149.43, the Office of Vital Statistics issues a copy to any applicant who submits an application and the fee.
There is only one narrow limit, and it does not touch the cause of death. For five years after a death, the decedent's Social Security number is removed from copies issued to the general public. The cause of death itself is never shielded.
This is consistent with our parent guide on Ohio death records, which explains the open-record rule in full. You can compare other states on our Death Records by State hub.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death is recorded in two main places in Ohio: the death certificate and, for investigated deaths, the coroner's autopsy report.
On the death certificate
Every Ohio death certificate has a medical certification section completed by the certifying physician or the coroner. It lists the immediate cause of death, the underlying conditions that led to it, and the manner of death. Only the certifying physician or coroner may later change this section, using a supplementary medical certification form filed with ODH.
In the coroner's autopsy report
When a coroner orders an autopsy, the pathologist's detailed findings and conclusions are filed in the coroner's office. This report often contains far more detail than the single cause-of-death line on the certificate, including toxicology and the sequence of injuries or disease.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
You request the cause of death by ordering the death certificate, the coroner's record, or both. The right source depends on whether a coroner investigated the death.

Order the death certificate. Request a certified or informational copy from the ODH Bureau of Vital Statistics online, by mail, or in person at a local city or county health department. The state search fee is $21.50 per copy, charged whether or not the record is found. Anyone may apply.
Request the coroner's record. For deaths a coroner investigated, the county coroner's completed records, including the autopsy report, are public records under Ohio Revised Code 313.10. You can submit a public-records request to the county coroner's office where the death occurred. Note that preliminary autopsy and investigative notes and photographs of the decedent are not public records.
The coroner and medical examiner role. Under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 313, a county coroner investigates deaths that are sudden, violent, suspicious, or otherwise unexplained. The coroner determines and certifies the cause and manner of death, and that verdict is the legally accepted cause of death on the certificate filed with vital statistics.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older Ohio deaths, you find the cause of death through archived records rather than the current ODH system. The state Bureau of Vital Statistics holds death records from 1971 to the present.
For deaths before 1971, the original certificate, which carries the cause of death, is held by the local health department where the death occurred, a county probate court, or the Ohio History Connection. The Ohio History Connection maintains a searchable Ohio Death Record Index covering the early statewide era.
The Social Security Death Index is useful for confirming the fact and date of death, but it never lists a cause of death. To learn how someone died, you still need the death certificate or coroner's record itself.
Ohio Cause of Death Records at a Glance
| Question | Ohio |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Yes, it is an open public record |
| Who can access it? | Anyone; no family relationship required |
| Where is it recorded? | Medical certification on the death certificate; coroner's autopsy report |
| Main source | Ohio Department of Health Bureau of Vital Statistics; county coroner |
| Cost | $21.50 per certified copy from ODH |
| Records held by state since | 1971 (earlier records archived locally) |

Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Vital-records and coroner procedures change. Verify current fees, forms, and access rules with the Ohio Department of Health Bureau of Vital Statistics or the county coroner before you rely on them.
Sources
Primary sources for this page are the Ohio Department of Health Bureau of Vital Statistics and the Ohio Revised Code (Chapters 313 and 3705 and Section 149.43), all linked below.
Sources and References
- Ohio Department of Health - Bureau of Vital Statistics (death records)(odh.ohio.gov).gov
- Ohio Revised Code Chapter 313 - Coroner(codes.ohio.gov).gov
- Ohio Revised Code Section 313.10 - Records; autopsy reports as public records(codes.ohio.gov).gov
- Ohio Revised Code Chapter 3705 - Vital Statistics(codes.ohio.gov).gov
- Ohio Revised Code Section 149.43 - Public records(codes.ohio.gov).gov
- Ohio History Connection - Ohio Death Record Index(ohiohistory.org).gov