Find Oklahoma County Death Records

Death records in Oklahoma County are maintained by the Oklahoma State Department of Health, just like every other county in the state. Oklahoma County is the most populous county in Oklahoma and home to the state capital. If you need a death certificate for someone who passed away in Oklahoma County, you go through the state vital records office. The main OSDH office is right here in Oklahoma City, which makes in-person visits convenient for local residents. This page covers fees, ID rules, free online searches, and local resources for getting death records in Oklahoma County.

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Oklahoma County at a Glance

Oklahoma City County Seat
~810,000 Population
7th Judicial District
$15.00 Death Certificate Fee
October 1908 Records Available From

Oklahoma County Death Certificate Process

Death certificates in Oklahoma County follow the same state process used across all 77 Oklahoma counties. The funeral director files the death certificate with the state after the physician completes the cause of death section. The Oklahoma State Department of Health stores all death records centrally. You cannot get a certified copy from the Oklahoma County Clerk or the local courthouse in Oklahoma City. Only the state vital records office issues certified copies.

Each copy costs $15. That fee covers the search and one certified copy if the record is found. It is not refundable. If they find no match, you still lose the $15. You can pay by check or money order made out to OSDH. Cash works for in-person visits only. Credit cards are not taken at state offices, but VitalChek accepts them with an extra service fee on top.

Under Title 63 O.S. Section 1-323, death records more than 50 years old are open records in Oklahoma. Anyone can request them. You still need to fill out an application and show your ID, but you do not have to prove a family connection. For deaths less than 50 years ago, you must show you are eligible.

There are three ways to get a death certificate. You can visit in person, mail a request, or order through VitalChek online. Each path has its own wait time. In-person visits take about an hour at the office. Mail requests need at least four weeks. VitalChek orders are often faster than mail, but you pay an added fee for the convenience.

For in-person service, you have three locations. The main office is in Oklahoma City at 123 Robert S. Kerr Ave. The Tulsa office sits at James O. Goodwin Health Center, 5051 S. 129th East Ave. A satellite office operates in McAlester at 1400 East College Avenue. Will call pickup runs from 12:00 to 4:45 PM on weekdays. Same day service is no longer offered at any location.

Mail requests go to Vital Records Service, Oklahoma State Department of Health, PO Box 53551, Oklahoma City, OK 73152. Send a completed application, a photocopy of your ID, and a check or money order for $15 per copy. Do not mail cash or your original ID.

OKC-County Health Department

The Oklahoma City-County Health Department (OCCHD) serves Oklahoma County. It is one of two independent city-county health departments in the state. OCCHD runs programs for immunizations, WIC, food safety, and other public health needs. But OCCHD does not maintain death records. Those are kept by the state.

The main OCCHD administration building is at 2600 NE 63rd St, OKC, OK 73111. Phone: (405) 427-8651. Hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM.

Oklahoma County Government Portal

The Oklahoma County government portal has general information about county offices and services. The county clerk handles land records, deeds, and other county filings. Death certificates are not part of what the county clerk does.

Oklahoma County government portal for death records

Use the portal to find phone numbers and addresses for Oklahoma County offices. For death certificate requests, though, you need to contact the state vital records office directly.

The OK2Explore database is a free tool from the state health department. It lets you look up death records that are more than five years old. You type in a name, date, or county and the system tells you if a record is on file. You can not view or print the actual certificate through this tool. But it is a good first step. It saves you $15 if the record you want is not there.

Records older than 50 years are open to the public. That means anyone can request a death certificate for a death that took place before 1976. For more recent records, you must show that you are an eligible applicant. Spouses, parents, children, and legal representatives can get copies. You need a valid photo ID and a completed application form.

The Oklahoma County records portal on OKCountyRecords.com provides access to land records, deeds, and other county documents. While this site does not have death certificates, it can help with estate and probate research that sometimes ties back to death records.

Oklahoma County death records search portal

The screenshot above shows the OKCountyRecords search page for Oklahoma County. Use it to browse public filings from the county.

Oklahoma County Death Records for Genealogy

Genealogy work in Oklahoma County often starts with death records. The Oklahoma Historical Society research center in Oklahoma City offers free access to Ancestry Library Edition, Fold3, and HeritageQuest. These databases have census data, military files, and some vital record indexes that help trace families in the Oklahoma County area.

The Gateway to Oklahoma History has digitized newspapers. Search for obituaries and death notices from old Oklahoma County publications. This is useful when official records are thin, especially for deaths before 1917 when filing was not mandatory. The OHS also keeps funeral home records and cemetery indexes that can fill gaps in your research.

Note: Official death certificates are only available from the state vital records office, not from the Oklahoma Historical Society.

Eligibility and ID for Oklahoma County Requests

You need a valid photo ID. The state accepts a U.S. driver's license, passport, military ID, or tribal photo ID card. Expired licenses must be less than three years expired. If you lack a primary ID, you can use two secondary forms instead. One must show your current address. Certificates requested with secondary ID get mailed to you. You cannot pick them up in person.

For records less than 50 years old, you also need to show eligibility. This usually means you are a family member or have a legal need for the record. The application asks for your relationship to the deceased. Incomplete forms or missing ID will delay your request, so get it right the first time.

Oklahoma County Court and Legal Resources

The Oklahoma State Courts Network provides free access to court records across the state. You can look up probate cases, estate filings, and other court actions in Oklahoma County. Probate cases often reference death certificates. When someone dies, the probate process begins with filing the death certificate along with the will or petition for estate administration.

For apostille services on death certificates needed for use in another country, contact the Oklahoma Secretary of State. They verify that the certifying official's signature is genuine. Amendments or corrections to a death certificate go through the state health department. The processing fee is $25 plus copy costs.

Contact the state vital records office by phone at (405) 271-4040 or email AskVR@health.ok.gov with questions about Oklahoma County death record requests.

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Cities in Oklahoma County

The following cities in Oklahoma County have their own pages with additional local resources for death record searches:

Nearby Counties