Oklahoma
Oklahoma Death Records: Are They Public + How to Get Them

Oklahoma is a closed-record state for death certificates. Until a death is 50 years old, only the person named on the record, immediate family, a legal representative, a funeral director, or someone with a court order can buy a certified copy. Records of deaths that occurred at least 50 years ago are open to anyone.
Are Death Records Public in Oklahoma?
No, Oklahoma death records are not fully public until 50 years after the death. Under 63 O.S. 1-323, death certificates are confidential records and become publicly available only once the death is at least 50 years old. This rule took effect on November 1, 2016.
During that 50-year window, a certified death certificate is restricted to a defined list of eligible people. The certificate itself, including the cause of death, is treated as a confidential record rather than a public one.
Oklahoma does maintain a limited online public index. The OSDH OK2Explore tool lets anyone search basic facts such as name, date of death, and county of death. Death data is not added to that index until five years after the death, and the index does not provide the full certificate.
If you need confirmation that a death occurred but are not eligible for a certified copy, the public index is the lawful starting point. For the certificate itself, you must meet the eligibility rules below or wait out the 50-year period.
Who Can Request an Oklahoma Death Record?
During the 50-year confidentiality period, only eligible applicants may obtain a certified Oklahoma death certificate. The Oklahoma State Department of Health limits certified copies to people with a direct, lawful connection to the record.

Eligible requesters include:
- The person named on the record (the subject).
- Immediate family: a surviving spouse, parent, child, grandparent, or sibling.
- A legal representative or someone administering the estate, with supporting court documentation.
- A funeral director acting in an official capacity.
- Anyone holding a court order from a court of competent jurisdiction.
- District attorneys, the Attorney General, and certain agencies for official purposes.
If you are not the parent, spouse, child, or the informant listed on the certificate, you must provide additional documentation that proves your eligibility. Every applicant must submit a photocopy of a valid government-issued photo ID, either their own or one from a person attesting on their behalf.
Once a death is at least 50 years old, these eligibility rules fall away. Proof of relationship is no longer required, although you still must submit an application, payment, and identification.
How to Get an Oklahoma Death Certificate
Certified Oklahoma death certificates are issued by the OSDH Vital Records office. You can order by mail, by phone, or online, and the same eligibility and ID rules apply to every method.
Your options are:
- Online: Through the state-authorized vendor VitalChek, linked from the OSDH death certificate page.
- By phone: Call OSDH Vital Records at (405) 426-8880.
- By mail: Send a completed application, ID photocopy, and payment to OSDH Vital Records, PO Box 248964, Oklahoma City, OK 73124-8964.
The fee is $20.00 for the first certified copy and $15.00 for each additional copy ordered at the same time. Each application must include a clear photocopy of a current, valid government-issued photo ID and full payment of all fees.
Processing time depends on the method. Mail orders can take up to about six weeks for processing and delivery. Online and phone orders are eligible for a "will call" pickup service at one of three locations in Oklahoma: Oklahoma City, Tulsa, and McAlester.
For broader context on how state offices handle vital records, see our overview of Death Records by State and our guide to whether birth certificates are public records.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Oklahoma?
The cause of death is not separately public in Oklahoma; it is part of the confidential death certificate. Because the entire certificate is restricted for 50 years, the medical cause of death is available only to the same eligible requesters who can obtain a certified copy.

Oklahoma's vital statistics law does not carve out the cause of death as a uniquely sealed field the way some states do. Instead, the whole record is confidential, so the cause of death travels with it and becomes public only when the certificate itself opens after 50 years.
Coroner and medical examiner findings can follow separate access rules. For more on how those documents are treated, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?.
How Far Back Do Oklahoma Death Records Go?
Oklahoma's statewide death registration is generally reliable from the early 20th century forward, and any death at least 50 years old is now an open public record. For deaths within the last 50 years, you must qualify under the eligibility rules to obtain a certified copy.
The OK2Explore online index covers more recent records, but only adds a death five years after it occurs and shows limited fields rather than the full certificate. For older genealogy research, the open 50-year threshold is usually the practical dividing line.
There is no national death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death certificates are issued by individual states, not the federal government, so each state controls its own records.
For nationwide research, the Social Security Administration maintains a public Death Master File, but under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 the public version excludes deaths that occurred within the most recent three calendar years.
Oklahoma Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | Oklahoma answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed for 50 years, then public |
| Waiting period until public | 50 years after the death |
| Who can request (during 50 years) | Subject, immediate family, legal representative, funeral director, court order |
| Certified copy fee | $20.00 first copy, $15.00 each additional |
| Issuing office | OSDH Vital Records |
| Governing statute | 63 O.S. 1-323 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in Oklahoma and is not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times can change. Always confirm current requirements with the Oklahoma State Department of Health Vital Records office before relying on them.
Sources
This article is based on the Oklahoma vital statistics statute (63 O.S. 1-323), the Oklahoma State Department of Health Vital Records office, and federal records guidance from the CDC and the Social Security Administration.
Sources and References
- 63 O.S. 1-323 - Vital statistics records confidential; exceptions; online public index (Oklahoma State Courts Network)(oscn.net).gov
- Oklahoma State Department of Health - Death Certificates(oklahoma.gov).gov
- Oklahoma State Department of Health - Birth and Death Certificate FAQs(oklahoma.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File (Limited Access)(ssa.gov).gov