Wisconsin
Wisconsin Death Records: Are They Public + How to Get One

Wisconsin restricts certified death certificates, but it is not fully closed. Under Wis. Stat. 69.21, anyone may buy an uncertified (informational) copy of a death after September 30, 1907, while a certified copy is limited to family, a legal representative, or someone with a direct and tangible interest. The cause of death stays off the uncertified copy until 50 years have passed. The fee is $20 for the first copy.
Are Death Records Public in Wisconsin?
Partly. Wisconsin restricts certified death certificates, but it is not a fully closed-record state. The state will not sell a certified copy to just anyone who asks, yet it does sell an uncertified, information-only copy to any member of the public.
Under Wisconsin Statute 69.21, a certified copy of a vital record for an event after September 30, 1907 is released only to a person with a direct and tangible interest in the record, or to someone presenting a court order. But the same statute, in section 69.21(2), directs the registrar to issue an uncertified copy of a post-1907 death record to any person. That uncertified copy is marked for information only and cannot be used for legal or identity purposes.
There is an important time limit on the most sensitive details. An uncertified copy of a death record cannot include the extended fact of death, which covers the cause of death, the manner of death, and the final disposition, unless 50 years have elapsed since the year of death or the applicant qualifies as a direct descendant or someone with a direct and tangible interest.
So a death record older than 50 years effectively becomes open to the public, including its cause-of-death information. For more recent deaths, access stays limited to family and other qualified requesters.
Who Can Request a Wisconsin Death Record?
A certified Wisconsin death certificate is available to people with a direct and tangible interest in the record. The Department of Health Services applies this test to deaths that occurred within the last 50 years.

Qualified requesters generally include:
- The spouse or domestic partner of the deceased
- A parent, child, sibling, grandparent, or grandchild
- The executor, personal representative, or administrator of the estate
- An attorney representing the estate or an heir
- A legal guardian or authorized legal representative
- Government agencies acting in their official capacity
A direct and tangible interest usually means a documentable legal, financial, or property right that depends on the record, such as settling an estate, claiming life insurance, or transferring title. Genealogical curiosity alone does not meet the standard for a record less than 50 years old.
You must show proof of identity. A primary ID such as a state driver license, state ID card, or passport satisfies the requirement, and applicants without one can typically use two forms of secondary identification.
How to Get a Wisconsin Death Certificate
Order a Wisconsin death certificate through the Wisconsin Department of Health Services (DHS) Vital Records Office, which serves as the state registrar, or through the county Register of Deeds where the death occurred.
The fee is $20 for the first certified copy and $3 for each additional copy of the same record ordered at the same time. The search fee is generally kept even if no record is found.
You have several ways to apply:
- By mail: Send the completed application, a copy of your ID, and payment to the State Vital Records Office in Madison. Mail orders typically take several weeks.
- In person: Visit the Vital Records Office in Madison, where same-day service is often available.
- Online or by phone: Order through VitalChek, the state's authorized independent vendor, which charges an added service fee. Phone orders use the VitalChek line.
- County Register of Deeds: For a recent death, the county office where the death occurred is often the fastest source.
Processing times vary by method, from same-day in person to several weeks by mail. Order extra copies up front, since estates, banks, and insurers each tend to want their own certified copy.
This page is general information about records access, not legal advice. If you need a record connected to a lawsuit, estate, or benefit claim, confirm the current requirements with the office before you apply.
Is the Cause of Death Public in Wisconsin?
Not for recent deaths. In Wisconsin, the cause of death is part of the extended fact of death and is restricted more tightly than the basic fact that a person died.

For a death that occurred after August 31, 2013, the standard copy contains only fact-of-death information. A requester can ask for an extended version that includes the cause of death, but only if they qualify through a direct and tangible interest or direct-descendant relationship, or once 50 years have passed.
For a death before September 1, 2013, copies historically included the cause and manner of death by default, though a requester could ask for a version without it. The 50-year public-access threshold still governs who can obtain the cause of death without showing a qualifying interest.
If you are researching how cause-of-death details are treated more broadly, see Are Cause of Death Records Public? and Are Autopsies Public Records?, which explain how medical examiner and coroner findings are handled.
How Far Back Do Wisconsin Death Records Go?
Statewide death registration in Wisconsin became more consistent in the early 1900s, and the state holds death records going back to the mid-1800s. The most accessible historical collection covers roughly 1852 through September 30, 1907.
Pre-1907 Wisconsin death records are managed by the Wisconsin Historical Society, which maintains a searchable online index of about 400,000 death records from that period. The index points to microfilm of the original records held in the Society library.
For deaths from October 1, 1907 onward, the DHS Vital Records Office and county Registers of Deeds hold the certificates, subject to the 50-year and direct-and-tangible-interest rules above.
On the national side, there is no single federal death-records database. The CDC National Center for Health Statistics confirms that death certificates are issued and held at the state level. The Social Security Administration publishes a public Death Master File, but under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 it excludes deaths within the most recent three calendar years. To explore related vital-record access, see Are Birth Certificates Public Records?.
Wisconsin Death Records at a Glance
| Question | Wisconsin answer |
|---|---|
| Open or closed record? | Mixed; certified copies limited to qualified requesters, but an uncertified information-only copy is available to anyone |
| Waiting period for public access | 50 years for cause-of-death / extended details |
| Who can request? | Family, estate representative, or anyone with a direct and tangible interest |
| Cost | $20 first copy; $3 each additional copy |
| Issuing office | Wisconsin DHS Vital Records Office (state registrar) |
| Governing statute | Wis. Stat. 69.21 |

Disclaimer: This page provides general legal information about public records access in Wisconsin and is not legal advice. Eligibility rules, fees, and processing times can change. Confirm current requirements with the Wisconsin Department of Health Services Vital Records Office or your county Register of Deeds before relying on any detail here.
Sources
This page draws on the Wisconsin Department of Health Services Vital Records Office, Wisconsin Statute 69.21, the CDC National Center for Health Statistics, and the Social Security Administration; see the linked government sources below, and browse Death Records by State for other states.
Sources and References
- Wisconsin Department of Health Services - Vital Records: Requesting a Vital Record(dhs.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wisconsin Department of Health Services - Vital Records (Certificates: Birth, Marriage, Divorce, Death)(dhs.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wisconsin Statute 69.21 - Copies of vital records(docs.legis.wisconsin.gov).gov
- Wisconsin Historical Society - About Our Pre-1907 Wisconsin Vital Records Collections(wisconsinhistory.org).gov
- CDC National Center for Health Statistics - Where to Write for Vital Records(cdc.gov).gov
- Social Security Administration - Death Master File(ssa.gov).gov