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Whether you are researching your ancestry or looking for information about a specific person, you may need to find an official notice of someone's death. If you live in the United States, you can request a death certificate from your state's vital records department, but you will have to pay a fee for the copy. However, there also are plenty of ways you can find a death notice for free.

Method 1
Method 1 of 2:

Searching Online Databases

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  1. Websites such as legacy.com provide a searchable database of obituaries that previously ran in newspapers.[1]
    • For example, legacy.com provides free access to obituaries from newspapers in the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom, Bermuda, Australia, and New Zealand.[2]
    • You can run a simple search with just the person's first and last name, or you can narrow your search by limiting the time, or by specifying the country and state, county, or region. Legacy.com also allows keyword searches, which could be particularly helpful if you were unsure what name was used in someone's obituary.[3]
    • Legacy.com only includes obituaries as far back as February of 2001.[4]
    • Websites such as WorldVitalRecords.com[5] and vitalrec.com[6] have more international death records and notices, as well as links to other sources of international vital records online. Although you can see basic information about your search results, you must subscribe to the service to gain access to the records themselves.
  2. If a funeral home was used, you can find an online database of official funeral home death notices at obitsforlife.com.
    • Obitsforlife.com allows you to search by name or location for death notices, or you can conduct a keyword search. In addition to funeral homes in North America, the website includes global death notices from countries such as Brazil, India, the Philippines, Japan, and the United Kingdom.
    • Death notices on obitsforlife.com can only be uploaded by licensed funeral homes, so authenticity is assured. At the same time, the site's database only includes listings from funeral homes that are members of the site, so results may be somewhat limited in that respect.
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  3. Several websites such as genealogybank.com and ancestry.com allow you to search the SSDI free of charge. The SSDI contains records of people with U.S. Social Security numbers whose deaths were reported to the Social Security Administration.[7]
    • Genealogybank.com has the SSDI from 1899 through 2011,[8] while ancestry.com allows you to search from 1935 through 2014.[9]
    • You can search using as much or as little information about the person as you have, including first and last name, date of birth, date of death, last known residence, or Social Security number.[10]
  4. State death indexes often go back further than online obituaries or the SSDI, and many are available online for free.
  5. The National Archives has information about vital records, including death records, and links to websites with free databases of death notices and records.[12]
    • Since these records are maintained by state or local authorities, they are not federal records and not held by the National Archives. However, the National Archives website provides plenty of online research tools and other assistance for genealogists, historians, and researchers.
    • The Archives does have casualty listings from the U.S. military as well as deaths of U.S. citizens in foreign countries.[13]
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Method 2
Method 2 of 2:

Using Physical Resources in Person

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  1. Public libraries typically have local newspapers archived, sometimes going back to the first year the newspaper was printed. Look through the newspapers to find obituary articles or other death notices.
    • For example, if you go to the New York Public Library, you can look at microform copies of The New York Times going back to 1857.[14]
    • If you're looking for a death notice from someone who died relatively recently, you may be able to find that online for free. However, if the person died hundreds of years ago, that information may not be digitized or available for free.
  2. If you need an official death certificate, you probably will have to order it from the vital records department in the person's last state of residence.
    • Typically you will be charged a fee for a standard copy and a little extra if you need a certified copy.[15]
  3. Even if a gravestone is weathered or illegible, you typically can search cemetery or burial records to find details about a person's death.
    • Some cemetery districts have websites where you can look up a grave online. For example, the Orange County Cemetery District provides a searchable database for graves in Anaheim Cemetery, El Toro Memorial Park, and Santa Ana Cemetery.[16] In many cases, however, you will have to make a visit to the cemetery itself to review the records.
  4. State records often go back further than Social Security or other national records and may provide more detail about the death. The state archives typically are housed in the state capital, but if you can't travel to that city you may be able to request documents through a local university research library or historical society.[17]
  5. While plenty of information is available online, a visit to an Archives facility may be necessary to find the death notice you need.
    • You can search the Archives website at http://www.archives.gov/locations/ to find the location nearest you and the services provided there.
    • Beyond just federal records, ancestry.com also is available for free at an Archives facility, so you may be able to find the records you need there without paying a subscription fee to use the online service.[18]
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Tips

  • During much the 19th century, the United States census included mortality schedules, or a record of death for individuals who died in the year before the census was taken. This is a good source of information about deaths during a time when death records were not reliably kept otherwise.[19]
  • If you’re looking for the death notice of a specific person, you can sometimes narrow down the search by providing additional information, such as the names of family members who may have been listed in the obituary.
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About This Article

Jennifer Mueller, JD
Written by:
Doctor of Law, Indiana University
This article was written by Jennifer Mueller, JD. Jennifer Mueller is an in-house legal expert at wikiHow. Jennifer reviews, fact-checks, and evaluates wikiHow's legal content to ensure thoroughness and accuracy. She received her JD from Indiana University Maurer School of Law in 2006. This article has been viewed 137,047 times.
65 votes - 35%
Co-authors: 6
Updated: October 24, 2021
Views: 137,047
Categories: Genealogy | Death
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 137,047 times.

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