South Carolina
Are Autopsy Reports Public in South Carolina? (2026)

South Carolina autopsy reports are not public records. Under the state Freedom of Information Act, the autopsy report is treated as a confidential medical record and is released only to the deceased person's legal next of kin (or someone with a court order or subpoena). The separate coroner's report is generally a public record. South Carolina runs a county-based coroner system.
Are Autopsy Reports Public in South Carolina?
No. South Carolina autopsy reports are not public records. The South Carolina Supreme Court held in Perry v. Bullock (2014) that an autopsy report is a medical record, which the Freedom of Information Act excludes from the definition of a public record under S.C. Code 30-4-20(c).
Because the autopsy report is a medical record, only the legal next of kin can obtain a copy, along with anyone holding a court order or a subpoena. A member of the general public or a journalist cannot pull an autopsy report through a routine FOIA request.
The coroner's report, which is the investigative summary of the death, is treated differently. That report is generally releasable to the public under the FOIA, while the underlying autopsy and toxicology findings stay restricted.
State law also bars release of autopsy photographs and videos to anyone outside the immediate family under S.C. Code 30-4-40(a)(18), a rule enacted after Dale Earnhardt's death.
Who Performs Autopsies in South Carolina?
South Carolina uses a county-based coroner system. Each of the 46 counties has an elected coroner who is responsible for medicolegal death investigation under S.C. Code Title 17, Chapter 5. The system is decentralized, so procedures and fees vary from county to county.

Counties with a population of 100,000 or more may establish a medical examiner to assist, but even then the coroner keeps ultimate responsibility for the statutory duties. The medical examiner's role is set by an annual written contract with the county.
The coroner or medical examiner is authorized to order an autopsy. Under S.C. Code 17-7-10, the coroner of the county where a body is found, or the circuit solicitor, may order an autopsy to ascertain the cause of death. The exam is performed by a qualified pathologist, typically one with forensic training.
An autopsy is not done for every death. Under S.C. Code 17-5-530, the coroner is notified and investigates deaths that are violent, apparent suicides, sudden deaths of a person in apparent good health, unattended or unexplained deaths, suspicious or unusual deaths, deaths in custody, and certain deaths shortly after hospital admission or surgery. An autopsy follows when the cause cannot otherwise be determined.
Who Can Request a South Carolina Autopsy Report?
Only the legal next of kin can request a South Carolina autopsy or toxicology report, along with anyone holding a court order or subpoena. This is the practical effect of the medical-records exemption confirmed in Perry v. Bullock.
Legal next of kin generally means the surviving spouse, then adult children, then parents, then siblings, in the order set by state law. The coroner's office may ask you to show your relationship to the deceased before releasing the report.
If you are not next of kin, your route to the autopsy report is a court order or subpoena issued in connection with litigation or a criminal matter. The coroner's report, by contrast, is generally available to any member of the public.
How to Get an Autopsy or Toxicology Report in South Carolina
You request the report from the county coroner's office in the county where the death was investigated, not from a central state agency. Most coroner offices provide a records-request form on their website or accept a written request by mail or email.

Your request should include the deceased person's full name, date of death, place of death, and your name, contact information, and relationship to the deceased. Next of kin should be ready to verify that relationship.
Fees vary by county. Many offices waive the fee for legal next of kin. Where a record is releasable to the public, a coroner's report often runs around $50 and an autopsy report, when authorized, can run higher (Charleston County, for example, lists $150 for an autopsy report). Confirm the exact fee with the office.
Processing time depends on whether the case is closed. A report tied to an open or pending investigation, such as a homicide, can be withheld until the investigation concludes. Toxicology results in particular may take weeks to months to finalize.
To understand the broader national picture, see our overview of whether Are Autopsies Public Records?
Autopsy Report vs Death Certificate in South Carolina
These are two different documents from two different agencies. The death certificate is the official vital record, issued by the South Carolina Department of Public Health (DPH) Vital Records, and it lists the cause and manner of death on a single line.
The autopsy report is the detailed forensic document prepared by the pathologist for the coroner, describing the examination, findings, and toxicology in full. The death certificate is the short, certified record families use for estates and benefits; the autopsy report is the long, restricted clinical record.
For death-certificate ordering, eligibility, and fees, start with our South Carolina Death Records guide. For other states, see the Death Records by State hub.
South Carolina Autopsy Report Facts
| Item | South Carolina |
|---|---|
| Autopsy report public? | No. Confidential medical record |
| Coroner's report public? | Generally yes, under SC FOIA |
| Who can request the autopsy report | Legal next of kin, or court order / subpoena |
| Death-investigation system | County-based coroner (ME optional in larger counties) |
| Where to request | County coroner's office |
| Typical fee | Often waived for next of kin; public copies vary (about $50 to $150) |
| Governing law | S.C. Code Title 17, Ch. 5; FOIA 30-4-20(c); Perry v. Bullock (2014) |

Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Coroner procedures, fees, and release rules vary by county and can change. Verify the current requirements with the specific South Carolina county coroner's office before relying on them.
Sources
This page draws on the CDC Public Health Law Program's South Carolina coroner profile, the South Carolina Code of Laws (Title 17 and Title 30), the South Carolina Supreme Court decision in Perry v. Bullock, and county coroner office records-request pages.
Sources and References
- CDC Public Health Law Program - South Carolina Coroner/Medical Examiner Laws(cdc.gov).gov
- S.C. Code 17-5-530 - Duty to notify coroner of certain deaths; inquiry; findings(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- S.C. Code 17-7-10 - Coroners or solicitors shall order autopsies(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- S.C. Code 30-4-20 - South Carolina Freedom of Information Act definitions(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- Charleston County Coroner - Records Request(charlestoncounty.gov).gov