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

To find someone's cause of death in Oregon, you typically request the long-form death certificate, which lists the cause, manner, and time of death. Oregon is a closed-record state, so the cause of death is restricted to immediate family, legal representatives, and certain others until 50 years after the death, when the record becomes public.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Oregon?
You find someone's cause of death in Oregon by obtaining the long-form death certificate, which lists the cause, manner, and time of death. The Oregon Center for Health Statistics (Oregon Vital Records), part of the Oregon Health Authority, issues these records. Only eligible requesters can receive the long form while a record is restricted.
If the death was sudden, violent, suspicious, or otherwise unexplained, the Oregon State Medical Examiner investigates and may produce an autopsy report. Eligible family members and legal representatives can request that report directly from the medical examiner.
For deaths that are not recent, the cause is often easiest to find through an obituary, a local newspaper, or a death record that has aged past the 50-year confidentiality window.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Oregon?
No, the cause of death is not public in Oregon during the confidentiality period. Oregon is a closed-record state, and access to death records is restricted for 50 years after the date of death. The cause-of-death detail sits on the long-form certificate, which is the most tightly controlled version.

Once 50 years have passed, a death record becomes available to the general public. This applies to deaths occurring after 1964, so older records steadily move into the public domain each year. After that point, anyone can request a copy that shows the cause of death.
This closed-record approach matches how Oregon treats related documents. For broader context on how states handle this question, see Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death is recorded in two main places in Oregon: the death certificate and, for investigated deaths, the medical examiner's autopsy report.
The Death Certificate
Oregon issues two versions of the death certificate. The short form lists the name, dates, location, and demographic facts, but it does not show the cause, manner, or time of death. The long form includes everything on the short form plus the cause, manner, and time of death.
The medical portion of the certificate, called the medical certification, is completed by the attending physician or, for investigated deaths, by the medical examiner. That certification is the official source of the cause-of-death information.
The Medical Examiner's Report
When a death is sudden, violent, suspicious, or unexplained, the Oregon State Medical Examiner investigates under ORS Chapter 146. The examiner determines the cause and manner of death and may order an autopsy and toxicology testing. The resulting autopsy report contains the most detailed cause-of-death findings.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
To request records that show the cause of death, you order the long-form death certificate or, for investigated deaths, the medical examiner's report. Each path has its own eligibility rules.

For the long-form certificate, order from the Oregon Center for Health Statistics. Each certified copy costs $25. Immediate family, legal representatives, funeral practitioners, and authorized representatives can receive the long form. People asserting only a property right usually receive the short form unless their documentation requires cause of death.
For the medical examiner's report, request it from the Oregon State Medical Examiner. Under ORS 146.035, a parent, spouse, sibling, child, or personal representative of the deceased, anyone who may be criminally or civilly liable for the death, and their authorized representatives may obtain the autopsy and laboratory reports. Fees are generally waived for relatives and attorneys, while parties such as insurers and investigators pay a fee.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older or historical deaths, the cause of death usually becomes much easier to find. Once a record passes the 50-year confidentiality window, it becomes public, and the State Registrar may issue a copy to anyone who applies with valid identification.

For deaths still inside that window, an obituary or a newspaper death notice is often the most accessible source. These frequently mention an illness, accident, or cause without requiring any eligibility check.
The Social Security Death Index is useful for confirming the fact of death, the date, and basic identifying details, but it does not list a cause of death. Treat it as a starting point for the date and place, then pursue the death certificate or obituary for the cause.
| Question | Oregon |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Restricted for 50 years, then public (deaths after 1964) |
| Who can access it while restricted? | Immediate family, legal representatives, funeral practitioners, and certain authorized requesters |
| Where is it recorded? | Long-form death certificate (medical certification); autopsy report for investigated deaths |
| Main source | Oregon Center for Health Statistics; Oregon State Medical Examiner for investigated deaths |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and procedures change. Verify current requirements with the Oregon Center for Health Statistics or the Oregon State Medical Examiner before you request a record.
Sources
This page draws on the Oregon Health Authority Center for Health Statistics, the Oregon State Medical Examiner, and Oregon Revised Statutes Chapters 146 and 432; for more, see Oregon Death Records and Death Records by State.
Sources and References
- Oregon Health Authority - Order a Death Certificate (long-form vs short-form, eligibility, 50-year restriction)(oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon Health Authority - Vital Records and Certificates(oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon Health Authority - Medical Examiners (death certification guidance)(oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon State Police - Medical Examiner Division (ORS 146 death investigations, ORS 146.035 records access)(oregon.gov).gov
- Oregon Medical Board - Medical Certification of Death(oregon.gov).gov