West Virginia
How to Get a West Virginia Death Certificate (2026)

You get a West Virginia death certificate from the state Vital Registration Office in Charleston, by mail, in person, or through the expedited VitalChek service. Certified copies go to next of kin or anyone with a legal right to the record. The fee is $12 for the first copy and $12 for each additional copy.
How Do You Get a Death Certificate in West Virginia?
You get a West Virginia death certificate from the state Vital Registration Office, part of the West Virginia Department of Health, located at 350 Capitol Street, Room 165, Charleston, WV 25301-3701. This office holds statewide death records from January 1917 to the present.
There are three main ways to request a certified copy.
The fastest method is in person. Same-day walk-in service is available at the Charleston office, with the walk-up window open Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Cash, check, money order, and debit or credit cards are accepted in person (card payments carry a 4% surcharge).
You can also order by mail. Complete the Application for a Copy of a West Virginia Death Certificate, enclose a clear color copy of your photo ID, and include a check or money order payable to Vital Registration. Cash is not accepted by mail.
For faster turnaround without traveling, VitalChek provides an expedited service that submits your request to the state and accepts credit card payment by phone. VitalChek charges its own service fee on top of the state fee.
For deaths that occurred before 1917, contact the Clerk of the County Court in the county where the death happened, since those older records were never sent to the state office.
Who Is Eligible to Request a West Virginia Death Certificate?
A certified West Virginia death certificate is issued only to the next of kin or to a person with a legal right to the record. West Virginia is not an open-records state for vital records, so casual or unrelated requesters cannot obtain a certified copy.

Next of kin generally includes the surviving spouse, parents, children, siblings, and grandparents of the deceased. A legal representative, such as an attorney, executor, or estate administrator acting on behalf of the family or estate, may also qualify.
To prove your identity, you must present one form of government-issued photo identification, such as a driver license, passport, military ID, or other government photo ID. If you do not have a photo ID, you may instead provide any two of the following: a major credit card, a motor vehicle registration, a state social services card, or a recent utility bill.
If you are uncertain whether you qualify, the Vital Registration Office can confirm eligibility at (304) 558-2931.
West Virginia Death Certificate Cost and Processing Time
A West Virginia death certificate costs $12 for the first certified copy and $12 for each additional copy ordered at the same time. The $12 covers a non-refundable search fee and entitles you to one certified copy, so even an unsuccessful search keeps the fee.
If a record falls outside the standard three-year search window, an additional $12 may apply for each extra three-year period searched.
Processing time depends on how you order. In-person requests are filled the same day. Mail requests typically take about 10 to 14 days once you account for mail delivery, office processing, and return postage. During low-volume periods mail orders can be ready in roughly five working days, while high-volume periods can stretch the wait to about three weeks.
VitalChek's expedited service shortens the handling and shipping time for an added fee.
Certified vs Informational Copy in West Virginia
West Virginia issues certified copies of death certificates and does not offer a separate informational (non-certified) copy to the public. A certified copy carries the state seal and is the version accepted for legal and administrative tasks.

You will need a certified copy to settle an estate, claim life insurance proceeds, close bank and investment accounts, transfer property or vehicle titles, and apply for survivor or Social Security benefits.
Because West Virginia restricts certified copies to next of kin and those with a legal right, there is no public, unrestricted informational version available simply for genealogy or curiosity.
As of March 2025, the state issues certified death certificates even when the cause or manner of death is still pending, so families no longer have to wait for an investigation to close before receiving a valid certificate.
How to Get Additional or Replacement Copies
To get additional or replacement copies, order them the same way you order a first copy: in person, by mail, or through VitalChek. Each copy is $12, whether you request them together or come back later.

When you know you will need several certified copies, request them all at once. Estates, insurers, banks, and benefit programs often each demand their own certified original, so ordering five or more copies up front saves repeat trips and postage.
If you lose a certificate or need a replacement years later, you simply submit a new request and pay the $12 per-copy fee again. There is no separate reduced rate for replacements.
| Item | West Virginia |
|---|---|
| Issuing office | Vital Registration Office, Charleston |
| First copy fee | $12 (includes search fee) |
| Each additional copy | $12 |
| Processing time | Same day in person; 10 to 14 days by mail |
| Eligibility | Next of kin or person with a legal right to the record |
Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Vital-records fees, eligibility rules, and processing times can change. Always confirm the current requirements with the West Virginia Vital Registration Office before you submit a request.
Sources
This guide is based on the West Virginia Vital Registration Office and the CDC Where to Write for Vital Records pages, all cited below.
Learn more in our parent guide to West Virginia Death Records, or compare states on the Death Records by State hub.
Sources and References
- West Virginia Department of Health, Vital Registration Certificate Requests(dhhr.wv.gov).gov
- Obtaining West Virginia Birth and Death Certificates(wvdhhr.org).gov
- WV Department of Health Announces Change to Certified Death Certificate Process (2025)(dhhr.wv.gov).gov
- CDC NCHS, Where to Write for Vital Records, West Virginia(cdc.gov).gov