Rhode Island
How to Get a Rhode Island Death Certificate (2026)

You get a Rhode Island death certificate from the Rhode Island Department of Health, Center for Vital Records, in Cranston, or from the city or town hall where the death occurred. Records under 50 years old are restricted to family and people with a direct interest. The first certified copy is $22 in person or $25 by mail.
How Do You Get a Death Certificate in Rhode Island?
You get a Rhode Island death certificate from the Rhode Island Department of Health, Center for Vital Records, which keeps deaths that occurred in the state, or from the city or town hall where the death took place. There are four main ways to request a certified copy.
In person: Visit the Center for Vital Records at Simpson Hall, 6 Harrington Rd., Cranston, RI 02920. The office is open by appointment only, so call ahead before you go.
By mail: Send a completed application, a copy of your photo ID, and payment to the Center for Vital Records. Mail requests carry a slightly higher fee than in-person requests.
Online: Rhode Island accepts online orders through its state vital-records ordering system. You complete the request, verify your identity, and pay by card.
At the city or town hall: You may also order a certified copy from the clerk in the city or town where the death occurred. Many families find the local clerk to be the fastest option.
Who Is Eligible to Request a Rhode Island Death Certificate?
For a death that occurred less than 50 years ago, only people with a qualifying relationship or a direct interest may obtain a certified copy. Rhode Island treats recent death records as confidential under its vital-records regulations.

Eligible requesters generally include:
- The spouse or registered domestic partner of the deceased
- The parents or legal guardian
- Grandparents
- Adult children and other adult descendants
- Adult siblings
- An attorney, title examiner, or genealogical-society member acting in an official capacity
- A person with a documented direct and tangible interest in the record
- Anyone presenting a valid court order authorizing release
You must show a valid government-issued photo ID such as a driver license, passport, or military ID. If you are not the immediate next of kin, expect to document your relationship or your legal interest.
Death records that are 50 years or older are public. Anyone may obtain those from the Rhode Island State Archives or from the city or town hall where the death occurred.
Rhode Island Death Certificate Cost and Processing Time
A Rhode Island death certificate costs about $22 for the search and first certified copy when ordered in person, or about $25 when ordered by mail. Each additional copy of the same record ordered at the same time is about $18.
Rhode Island also offers a rush option for an extra fee, generally around $7, when you need the record faster. Fees can change, so confirm the current amount with the Center for Vital Records before you send payment.
Processing time depends on the method. In-person appointments are often handled the same day. Mail requests typically take about 4 to 6 weeks, while a rush request is processed in roughly 5 to 7 business days. The local city or town hall is frequently the quickest route for a recent death.
In person, the state office accepts cash, money order, and major debit and credit cards. Mail requests must include a check or money order payable to the General Treasurer, State of Rhode Island; cash and cards are not accepted by mail.
Certified vs Informational Copy in Rhode Island
A certified copy is the official document. It carries the registrar signature, the raised or printed seal, and a statement that the facts are true as recorded. You need a certified copy to settle an estate, claim life insurance, close financial accounts, or transfer property.

Rhode Island does not market a separate consumer informational copy the way some states do. For recent deaths, the certified copy issued to eligible family members is the standard product.
Non-certified copies are issued only in limited situations, such as releases to government agencies or approved research institutions under the state vital-records rules. For most personal and legal needs, request the certified copy.
For older, public records, the State Archives can supply certified copies of deaths going back to 1853, and many open records can be viewed or downloaded online.
How to Get Additional or Replacement Copies
The easiest time to get extra copies is when you place your original order, because additional copies of the same record requested the same day are charged the lower per-copy rate of about $18 each. Estates often need several certified copies, so order what you expect to use up front.

If you need a replacement later, you submit a new request to the Center for Vital Records or the city or town hall, with your ID and payment, just as you did the first time. You must still meet the eligibility rules each time you order.
There is no separate amendment involved in simply ordering more copies. Corrections to the information on a certificate are a different process handled through the Department of Health.
| Item | Rhode Island |
|---|---|
| Issuing office | RI Department of Health, Center for Vital Records (Cranston); or city/town hall of death |
| First certified copy fee | About $22 in person / $25 by mail (includes search) |
| Additional copy fee | About $18 each, same-day order |
| Processing time | Same day in person; allow several weeks by mail |
| Eligibility | Spouse/partner, parents, grandparents, adult children/siblings, others with direct interest; ID required |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Vital-records fees, eligibility rules, and processing times change. Always confirm current requirements with the Rhode Island Department of Health, Center for Vital Records, or the city or town hall before you submit a request.
Sources
This guide draws on the Rhode Island Department of Health Center for Vital Records, the Rhode Island vital-records regulations (216-RICR-10-10-1), and the Rhode Island State Archives.
Related: Rhode Island Death Records and Death Records by State.
Sources and References
- Requesting a Vital Record from the State, RI Department of Health Center for Vital Records(health.ri.gov).gov
- Birth, Death, and Marriage Records (Vital Records), RI Department of Health(health.ri.gov).gov
- Rules and Regulations Governing Vital Records (216-RICR-10-10-1), RI Department of State(rules.sos.ri.gov).gov
- State Vital Records, Rhode Island Department of State Archives(sos.ri.gov).gov