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

Oregon is a closed-record state for death certificates. Only the decedent's immediate family, next of kin, legal representatives, and people with a documented property right may obtain a certified copy. Death records stay confidential until 50 years after the date of death, when they become public for any deaths occurring after 1964.
Are Death Records Public in Oregon?
No, Oregon death records are not open public records during the confidentiality period. Vital records are specifically exempt from disclosure under the Oregon Public Records Law through ORS 432.350. Access is limited to a defined list of eligible requesters.
A death certificate stays confidential for 50 years after the date of death. For any death occurring after 1964, once 50 years have passed the record becomes available to the general public, and the State Registrar may issue a certified copy to anyone who applies with valid identification.
This is the same pattern Oregon applies to other vital records. For broader context on how states handle related documents, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Birth Certificates Public Records?.
Who Can Request an Oregon Death Record?
During the 50-year confidentiality window, only people with a qualifying relationship or interest may order a certified death certificate. The Oregon Health Authority limits eligibility to the following:

- The decedent's spouse or registered domestic partner
- A child, parent, sibling, grandparent, or grandchild
- The next of kin or a legal guardian who served immediately before death
- A licensed attorney or other legal representative acting for the estate
- An authorized representative holding notarized permission from an eligible family member
- A government agency acting in its official duties
- The funeral service practitioner or staff named in the record of death
- A person who can demonstrate a tangible property right, such as a life insurance beneficiary, joint account holder, or survivor benefit claimant
Every applicant must state their relationship to the person named on the record. Attorneys must identify whom they represent. If you do not personally qualify, you must include a notarized permission note signed by an eligible immediate family member.
You also need to prove your identity. The office accepts a current, valid driver's license, state ID card, permit, passport, or passport card with a photo. If you have no photo ID, you may submit three alternative documents, at least one of which shows your current address.
How to Get an Oregon Death Certificate
You order Oregon death certificates from the Oregon Center for Health Statistics, the state's vital records office within the Oregon Health Authority. The standard fee is $25 for the search and the first certified copy, and $25 for each additional copy of the same record.
There are several ways to apply:
By Mail
Mail your completed application, copy of your ID, and payment to Oregon Vital Records, PO Box 14050, Portland OR 97293. Mail processing typically takes about three to five weeks.
Drop Box
You may drop your request at 800 NE Oregon Street in Portland for the $25 fee. Drop box requests run longer, around eight to ten weeks.
In Person
Schedule an appointment to order in person. The in-person fee is $28 for the first certificate, which includes a small authentication charge, and most appointments are completed the same day or the next workday.
Online or Phone
The state uses an authorized vendor for online and phone orders, which adds an expedite and processing charge on top of the $25 certificate fee. Vendor orders are typically processed within about three workdays, plus shipping time.
Fees and processing times can change, so confirm the current amounts with the office before you send payment.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Oregon?
The cause of death is restricted in Oregon and does not appear on every certificate. Oregon issues two formats: a Short Form, which omits the cause of death, and a Long Form, which includes it.

Eligibility for the Long Form depends on your relationship or interest. The decedent's immediate family, including a spouse or registered domestic partner, children, and parents, along with legal guardians and legal representatives acting for the estate, may receive the Long Form with the cause of death. Government agencies and the funeral service practitioner or person in charge of disposition may also obtain it.
By contrast, people who assert only a personal or property-right interest receive the Short Form by default. The Oregon Health Authority issues only the Short Form without cause of death to property-right claimants unless the property right specifically requires cause-of-death information, such as a life insurance beneficiary processing a claim. More distant relatives and other applicants relying on a personal interest may need to supply additional documentation to obtain the Long Form. This approach protects sensitive medical information while still allowing families and authorized parties to settle affairs.
If you are researching how cause-of-death and autopsy information is treated more generally, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?.
How Far Back Do Oregon Death Records Go?
The Oregon Center for Health Statistics holds death records from 1903 onward, when statewide registration began. Records that have passed the 50-year confidentiality threshold are considered public and are transferred to the Oregon State Archives, where genealogists and the public can access the older historical index.
For nationwide research, remember there is no single federal death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death certificates are issued and held at the state level, not federally. Researchers often supplement state records with the Social Security Death Index, drawn from the Social Security Administration's public Death Master File. Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, that public file excludes deaths within the most recent three calendar years.
Oregon Death Records: Quick Facts
| Question | Oregon Answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed record (restricted access) |
| Waiting period until public | 50 years after date of death (deaths after 1964) |
| Who can request a certified copy | Family, next of kin, legal representative, authorized representative, government agency, funeral practitioner, or person with a property right |
| Standard fee | $25 per certified copy (extra fees for online, phone, or in-person) |
| State office | Oregon Center for Health Statistics (Oregon Vital Records), Oregon Health Authority |
| Governing statute | ORS 432.350 and ORS 432.380 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about records access in Oregon, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times change. Always verify the current requirements directly with the Oregon Center for Health Statistics before you apply.
Sources
This article is based on official guidance from the Oregon Center for Health Statistics, the Oregon Revised Statutes, and federal vital-records authorities, all listed below.
Sources and References
- Oregon Health Authority, Order a Death Certificate (Oregon Center for Health Statistics)(oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon Health Authority, Eligibility to Order Vital Records(oregon.gov).gov
- ORS 432.380, Issuance of certified copies of vital records(oregonlegislature.gov).gov
- ORS 432.350, Vital records exempt from public disclosure(oregonlegislature.gov).gov
- Oregon Secretary of State, State Archives: About Vital Records(sos.oregon.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