Rhode Island
How to Find a Cause of Death in Rhode Island (2026)

Rhode Island records a person's cause of death on the medical certification of the death certificate. That record is restricted for 50 years, so during that window only family, a legal representative, or someone with a direct and tangible interest can obtain it. After 50 years the record is public.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in Rhode Island?
You find a person's cause of death in Rhode Island by obtaining the death certificate, which carries the medical certification of cause of death. For a recent death, you must be an eligible requester to get a certified copy from the Rhode Island Department of Health, Center for Vital Records.
The quickest public source is often the obituary or a local newspaper, which families frequently use to share a cause such as cancer, a heart condition, or an accident. That information is voluntary, so it may not appear at all.
When a death is sudden, violent, or unexplained, the Office of State Medical Examiners investigates and sets the cause. The full autopsy report goes to the next of kin or the authorized legal representative, not the general public.
For older deaths, the path opens up. Once a record is 50 years old it becomes public, and anyone can view the certificate and its cause-of-death entry.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Rhode Island?
No, not for recent deaths. Rhode Island is a closed-record state, and the cause of death sits on the death certificate, which is confidential for 50 years from the date of death under R.I. Gen. Laws Section 23-3-23.

During that 50-year period, the state does not sell certified copies to the general public. The cause of death is not redacted or held back separately from the rest of the certificate; it is simply part of a record that only eligible requesters can buy.
After 50 years, the record becomes public. At that point the cause of death is open to anyone, with no proof of relationship or interest required.
So whether the cause of death is public in Rhode Island depends almost entirely on how long ago the person died.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
In Rhode Island the cause of death is recorded in two main places: the death certificate and, when there is an investigation, the autopsy report.
The death certificate
The certificate carries the medical certification of cause of death. Rhode Island's vital-records regulations define this as the entry of a definite medical diagnosis of cause of death by a physician or a medical examiner.
A physician who attended the death generally completes the certification within 48 hours. When the medical examiner has jurisdiction, the medical examiner completes it instead. The entry can reflect clinical findings or autopsy results.
The autopsy report
For deaths the Office of State Medical Examiners investigates, the detailed cause, manner, and toxicology findings appear in the autopsy report. A medical examiner performs an autopsy when the cause of death cannot be established with a reasonable degree of certainty.
The full autopsy report is restricted. It is released to the next of kin or the authorized legal representative responsible for the body, to a treating physician, or to an insurance carrier with the next of kin's written consent.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
To get the cause of death for a recent Rhode Island death, request a certified copy of the death certificate from the Department of Health, Center for Vital Records, at Simpson Hall, 6 Harrington Rd., Cranston. You can apply in person by appointment, by mail, or online through the state vendor.

You must be an eligible requester. That includes the spouse or domestic partner, parents or guardian, grandparents, adult children, adult siblings, an attorney or other legal representative, or anyone with a direct and tangible interest in the record.
Bring or include a valid government-issued photo ID, such as a driver license, passport, or military ID. The first certified copy is about $22 in person, with additional copies of the same record about $18 each.
To request the autopsy report, contact the Office of State Medical Examiners. Because that report is limited to next of kin and a few other parties, expect to document your relationship before it is released.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For a death that occurred 50 or more years ago, the cause of death is part of a public record. You no longer need to be family or prove an interest to view the certificate.

Rhode Island death records that have passed the 50-year mark are held by the Rhode Island State Archives, and copies may also be available from the city or town hall where the death occurred. These older certificates list the cause of death as it was recorded at the time.
For genealogy or family-history research, the certificate is the most reliable source, because obituaries and indexes often omit the cause. Older newspaper death notices can fill gaps when a certificate is hard to locate.
The Social Security Death Index is useful for confirming that a person died and roughly when, but it records only the fact of death. It does not include the cause of death, so you still need the certificate for that detail.
| Question | Rhode Island |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | Restricted for 50 years from the date of death; public after 50 years |
| Who can access it during the closed period? | Spouse or domestic partner, parents, grandparents, adult children, adult siblings, legal representative, or anyone with a direct and tangible interest |
| Where is it recorded? | On the death certificate (medical certification); detailed findings in the autopsy report |
| Main source | RI Department of Health, Center for Vital Records (recent); RI State Archives (50+ years) |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Access rules, fees, and forms change. Confirm the current requirements with the Rhode Island Department of Health Center for Vital Records or the Office of State Medical Examiners before you apply.
For the full access rules and fees, see Rhode Island Death Records, and compare other states on the Death Records by State hub. For the national picture, see Are Cause of Death Records Public?
Sources
This page draws on the Rhode Island Department of Health vital-records rules, the Office of State Medical Examiners regulations, and Rhode Island General Laws as published by the state.
Sources and References
- Rhode Island Department of Health, Birth, Death, and Marriage Records (Vital Records)(health.ri.gov).gov
- Rules and Regulations Governing Vital Records (216-RICR-10-10-1), medical certification of cause of death and eligible requesters(rules.sos.ri.gov).gov
- Medical Examiner System (216-RICR-60-10-1), autopsies and release of reports(rules.sos.ri.gov).gov
- Rhode Island State Archives, Vital Records (records 50+ years old)(sos.ri.gov).gov