South Carolina
How to Find a Cause of Death in South Carolina (2026)

In South Carolina, a person's cause of death is recorded in the medical certification section of the death certificate and, for investigated deaths, in the coroner's or medical examiner's autopsy report. It is not fully public for recent deaths. Eligible family members can obtain a certified copy, while everyone else can only confirm that the death occurred until the record opens after 50 years.
How Do You Find Someone's Cause of Death in South Carolina?
To find someone's cause of death in South Carolina, start with the death certificate, which lists the cause in its medical certification section. If you are an eligible requester, you can order a certified copy from the South Carolina Department of Public Health, Office of Vital Records.
If a coroner or medical examiner investigated the death, an autopsy report may give a fuller explanation. Families and legal representatives can request that report from the county coroner's office that handled the case.
When you cannot obtain the certificate, the published obituary or a local newspaper notice often summarizes how the person died. For deaths more than 50 years ago, the record is public and anyone can order a copy.
Is the Cause of Death Public in South Carolina?
No, the cause of death is not fully public in South Carolina for recent deaths. The cause appears on the death certificate, and South Carolina is a closed-record state for the first 50 years after a death.

Under S.C. Code Ann. Section 44-63-84, certified copies of a death record are restricted during that window to the decedent's immediate family, a legal representative, or a person who can show a direct and tangible interest in a personal or property right.
People who do not qualify are not given the certificate. Instead, the Office of Vital Records may issue a statement confirming that the death occurred, including the date and county, but not the cause.
Once 50 years have passed, the death record becomes a public record. At that point any person may obtain a copy that shows the cause of death.
Where the Cause of Death Is Recorded
The cause of death is recorded in two main places in South Carolina: the death certificate and, when applicable, the autopsy report. Both are official documents, but they have different access rules.
The Death Certificate
The medical certification portion of the certificate states the immediate cause of death and any underlying conditions. A physician completes this for natural deaths under medical care.
For deaths that fall under official investigation, a coroner, deputy coroner, medical examiner, or deputy medical examiner must complete and sign the medical certification within 24 hours of being notified, under S.C. Code Section 17-5-560.
The Autopsy Report
When a death is sudden, violent, suspicious, or unexplained, the coroner or medical examiner makes an inquiry into the cause and manner of death under S.C. Code Section 17-5-530. They may order an autopsy to determine the cause.
The resulting autopsy report is more detailed than the certificate. It is generally released to the next of kin and legal representatives rather than to the general public.
How to Request Records That Show the Cause of Death
To request a record that shows the cause of death, decide which document you need and confirm you are eligible. The death certificate is handled by the Office of Vital Records; the autopsy report is handled by the county coroner.

For a certified death certificate, apply to the South Carolina Department of Public Health, Office of Vital Records in Columbia. Provide the decedent's information, proof of your identity, and proof of your relationship or interest. The standard search fee is $12 and includes one certified copy if the record is found, with additional copies at $3 each.
For an autopsy report, contact the coroner's office in the county where the death occurred or was investigated. Eligible requesters are usually limited to immediate family and legal representatives, and you may need to put the request in writing.
Because the cause of death is sensitive, both offices verify eligibility before releasing records. Always confirm current requirements and fees with the office directly before applying.
Finding the Cause of Death for Older or Historical Deaths
For older deaths, access becomes easier once the 50-year confidentiality window closes. After 50 years, a South Carolina death record is public, so any person may order a copy that shows the cause of death.

South Carolina death records held by the state date back to January 1915. For research into deaths before then, county-level records, church records, and cemetery records may help, though they rarely state a precise medical cause.
The Social Security Death Index is a useful starting point for confirming that a person died and when. It does not list the cause of death, so you will still need the certificate or an obituary for that detail.
| Question | South Carolina |
|---|---|
| Is the cause of death public? | No for the first 50 years; public after 50 years |
| Who can access it sooner? | Immediate family, legal representative, or person with a direct and tangible interest |
| Where is it recorded? | Medical certification on the death certificate; autopsy report |
| Main source | SC Dept. of Public Health, Office of Vital Records; county coroner |
Disclaimer: This page provides general information about South Carolina records and is not legal advice. Rules, fees, and eligibility can change, so verify the current requirements with the South Carolina Office of Vital Records or the county coroner before relying on this information.
Sources
This page is based on guidance from the South Carolina Department of Public Health, Office of Vital Records, and South Carolina statutes governing vital records and coroners and medical examiners.
Related pages: South Carolina Death Records and Death Records by State. See also Are Cause of Death Records Public?.
Sources and References
- Death Certificates - South Carolina Department of Public Health, Office of Vital Records(dph.sc.gov).gov
- S.C. Code Ann. Section 17-5-530 - Duty to inquire into cause and manner of death(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- S.C. Code Ann. Section 17-5-560 - Medical certification of cause of death by coroner or medical examiner(scstatehouse.gov).gov
- S.C. Code Ann. Section 44-63-84 - Access to death records and 50-year public record rule(scstatehouse.gov).gov