Utah
Utah Death Records: Are They Public and How to Get Them

Utah is a closed-record state for death certificates. Certified copies are restricted to the deceased person's immediate family, legal guardian, or a designated legal representative who can show a direct, tangible, and legitimate interest. Death records become public to anyone 50 years after the date of death under Utah Code 26B-8-125.
Are Death Records Public in Utah?
No. Utah is a closed-record state, so a death certificate is not open to the general public for the first 50 years after the death. During that window, only people who can demonstrate a direct, tangible, and legitimate interest may obtain a certified copy.
This rule comes from Utah Code 26B-8-125, the statute governing inspection of vital records. The law treats a recent death certificate as a private record rather than a public document.
Once 50 years have passed from the date of death, the record becomes public. At that point any member of the public may request a copy without proving a relationship, and the Utah Division of Archives and Records Service makes historical death records available to researchers.
Utah's approach is common among states. There is no national, federal death-records database. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death records are created and held by each state, so where the death occurred determines who can access the certificate.
Who Can Request a Utah Death Record?
During the 50-year restriction, only a narrow group of eligible requesters may obtain a certified Utah death certificate. Utah Code 26B-8-125 limits access to those with a direct, tangible, and legitimate interest in the record.

Under the statute, that interest is present only if the applicant is one of the following:
- A member of the deceased person's immediate family, such as a spouse, parent, adult child, sibling, or grandparent.
- The legal guardian of the deceased person.
- A designated legal representative acting on behalf of an eligible party.
Each requester must prove who they are and why they qualify. The Office of Vital Records and Statistics asks for valid government-issued photo identification. Immediate family members are asked to provide proof of relationship, guardians may need to show court documents, and legal representatives must supply a letter of legal need from the entity requiring the record.
After 50 years, these eligibility limits no longer apply. The record is public, and anyone may request a certified or informational copy.
How to Get a Utah Death Certificate
Certified Utah death certificates are issued by the Office of Vital Records and Statistics, part of the Utah Department of Health and Human Services. You can order in person, by mail, or online, and many county health departments also issue certificates for deaths registered in Utah.
The state fee is approximately $30 for the first certified copy and $10 for each additional copy of the same record ordered at the same time. Utah's fee schedule is updated periodically, so confirm the current amount with the office before you send payment.
Here are the main ways to order:
- In person. Visit the state office in Salt Lake City or a participating local health department vital records office. In-person service is usually the fastest option.
- By mail. Send a completed application, a copy of your ID, proof of relationship, and payment by check or money order to the Office of Vital Records and Statistics, 288 North 1460 West, PO Box 141012, Salt Lake City, UT 84114.
- Online. Order through the state's secure portal at secure.utah.gov/vitalrecords, which uses an authorized processing service. Online and mail orders typically take longer than in-person requests.
Processing times vary with volume, so allow several weeks for mailed requests. Including complete documentation up front helps avoid delays or a returned application.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Utah?
The cause of death is printed on the certified Utah death certificate, but it is not freely public during the 50-year restriction. Because the full certificate is a private record under Utah Code 26B-8-125, only eligible requesters can obtain a copy that shows the medical cause.

Utah does not split the record into a separate "confidential medical" section the way some states do. Instead, the entire certified certificate, including the cause of death, is limited to immediate family, guardians, and legal representatives until the record opens to the public.
After 50 years, when the record becomes public, the cause of death is released along with the rest of the certificate. For more on how states treat this information, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?, which is often where detailed cause-of-death findings live.
How Far Back Do Utah Death Records Go?
The Office of Vital Records and Statistics holds Utah death certificates registered with the state from 1905 onward. Death registration became consistent statewide in the early 20th century, so records before that point may be incomplete or held only at the county or local level.

Once a death record passes the 50-year mark, it moves into the public domain and is maintained by the Utah Division of Archives and Records Service. The state archives provides a searchable death certificate index and digital images for older records, making them a practical starting point for genealogy and historical research.
For deaths nationwide, the Social Security Administration's public Death Master File is another reference, but it has limits. Under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013, the public file excludes deaths that occurred within the most recent three calendar years, so it is not a substitute for a certified state record.
| Question | Utah answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed record for 50 years |
| When do records become public? | 50 years after the date of death |
| Who can request before then? | Immediate family, guardian, or designated legal representative |
| Certified copy fee | About $30 first copy, $10 each additional (verify current) |
| Issuing office | Office of Vital Records and Statistics, Utah DHHS |
| Governing statute | Utah Code 26B-8-125 |
Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in Utah, not legal advice. Rules, fees, and processing times change, and individual situations vary. Confirm current requirements with the Office of Vital Records and Statistics or a qualified attorney before acting.
For neighboring topics, see Are Birth Certificates Public Records? and browse the full Death Records by State directory.
Sources
This page is based on the Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics, Utah Code 26B-8-125, the Utah Division of Archives and Records Service, and federal references from the CDC/NCHS and the Social Security Administration, listed below.
Sources and References
- Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics, Death Records(utah.gov).gov
- Utah Code 26B-8-125, Inspection of vital records(le.utah.gov).gov
- Utah Division of Archives and Records Service, Death Records(archives.utah.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics, Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration, Death Master File access(ssa.gov).gov