West Virginia
West Virginia Death Records: Are They Public + How to Get One

West Virginia is a closed-record state for death certificates. Certified copies are confidential and restricted to the next of kin, a legal representative, or someone with a documented relationship until the record is 50 years old, after which any death record becomes public and open to anyone.
Are Death Records Public in West Virginia?
No. West Virginia is a closed-record state, so death certificates are confidential and are not available to the general public. Under W. Va. Code 16-5-27, it is unlawful to disclose or copy a confidential vital record unless the request is authorized by statute, by legislative rule, or by a court order.
That confidentiality is not permanent. The same statute provides that once 50 years have elapsed after the date of death, the record becomes available to the public without restriction. A death from 1974 or earlier is therefore an open public record that anyone may request, while a recent death is restricted to qualified applicants.
This two-tier system is common across the country. There is no national death-records database that the public can search. As the CDC and its National Center for Health Statistics confirm, death certificates are issued and held by each individual state, so a West Virginia death is governed by West Virginia law.
Who Can Request a West Virginia Death Record?
For records less than 50 years old, only certain people may obtain a certified copy. West Virginia limits access to applicants with a direct and tangible connection to the deceased, which generally includes the following.

Eligible requesters
- The surviving spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, or grandchild of the deceased.
- A legal representative, such as an attorney, executor, or administrator acting on behalf of the estate or an eligible family member, with proof of that role.
- A person who can document a direct interest, such as settling an estate, a life-insurance claim, or another legal matter.
The Vital Registration Office may require proof of relationship before releasing a confidential record. Once a record passes the 50-year mark, these restrictions no longer apply and any member of the public may request it.
Identification required
Every applicant must prove their identity. The office accepts one primary photo ID, such as a state-issued driver's license (it may be expired), a U.S. or foreign passport, a military ID, or a government photo ID card.
If you do not have a primary photo ID, you may instead provide any two secondary documents, such as a major credit card, a motor-vehicle registration, a state social-services card, or a recent utility bill in your name. Exceptions are handled case by case when no acceptable ID is available.
How to Get a West Virginia Death Certificate
Certified death certificates are issued by the Vital Registration Office within the West Virginia Department of Health, located at 350 Capitol Street, Room 165, Charleston, WV 25301. The fee is $12 per certified copy, and debit or credit card payments add a 4% processing charge.
You have several ways to order.
In person
Same-day walk-in service is available at the walk-up window at 350 Capitol Street in Charleston, open 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. This is the fastest option when you need a certificate immediately.
By mail
Send a completed application, a copy of your acceptable identification, and a check or money order for the fee to the Vital Registration Office, 350 Capitol Street, Room 165, Charleston, WV 25301-3701. Mail processing takes longer than in-person service, so plan ahead if you have a deadline.
Online or expedited
Expedited service is offered through the state's authorized vendor, VitalChek, which charges additional fees on top of the $12 state fee. The state itself receives only the $12 base fee per copy regardless of which method you choose.
West Virginia's Health Statistics Center now fulfills certified death-certificate orders immediately, even when the cause and manner of death are still listed as pending. These certificates remain valid and legitimate documents, which means families no longer have to wait for a final cause of death to receive a usable certificate.
Is the Cause of Death Public in West Virginia?
The cause of death is recorded on the certified West Virginia death certificate, and it carries the same confidential status as the rest of the record. While a death is less than 50 years old, the medical cause of death is restricted to the same eligible requesters who can obtain the certificate itself.

Once a record becomes public at the 50-year mark, the cause of death listed on it becomes public along with the rest of the document. For deaths investigated by a medical examiner, separate autopsy and investigative reports follow their own access rules. You can read more in our overviews of whether cause of death records are public and whether autopsies are public records.
How Far Back Do West Virginia Death Records Go?
Statewide death registration in West Virginia began in 1917, and the Vital Registration Office holds certified death records from that era forward. Records older than 50 years are open to the public, so historical deaths can be requested by genealogists and researchers without proving a relationship.

For older or out-of-state research, two national resources help fill gaps. The Social Security Administration maintains the Death Master File, whose public version excludes any death within the last three calendar years under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013. The CDC's National Center for Health Statistics also publishes the Where to Write for Vital Records guide, which points researchers to the correct state office. Neither replaces an official West Virginia certificate, which remains the authoritative legal record.
Researchers tracing family history often combine death records with birth certificate records and other vital documents to build a complete picture. To compare access rules elsewhere, see our full guide to death records by state.
| Question | West Virginia answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Closed record; certified copies are confidential |
| When do records become public? | 50 years after the date of death |
| Who can request a recent record? | Next of kin, legal representative, or a person with a documented relationship or interest |
| Fee per certified copy | $12 (plus a 4% fee on card payments) |
| Issuing office | Vital Registration Office, West Virginia Department of Health, Charleston |
| Governing statute | W. Va. Code 16-5-27 |
Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in West Virginia and is not legal advice. Fees, eligibility rules, and procedures change. Always confirm current requirements with the West Virginia Vital Registration Office before applying.
Sources
This page is based on the West Virginia Department of Health Vital Registration Office, the West Virginia Code, and federal records guidance from the CDC and the Social Security Administration, listed below.
Sources and References
- West Virginia Department of Health, Vital Registration Office - Certificate Requests(dhhr.wv.gov).gov
- W. Va. Code 16-5-27 - Disclosure of confidential vital records(code.wvlegislature.gov).gov
- West Virginia Department of Health - Change to Certified Death Certificate Process (2025)(dhhr.wv.gov).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File / NTIS Limited Access(ssa.gov).gov