How to Get a Death Certificate in Oklahoma
After a death in Oklahoma, certified copies of the death certificate are the single most-requested document — banks, insurers, and government agencies almost always ask for an original. Here is exactly where to order them, what they cost, and how many you'll need.
Oklahoma — quick facts
- Issuing office
- Oklahoma Vital Records Service
- Cost per certified copy
- $20
- Phone
- 405-426-8880
- Recommended copies
- 10–15
Three ways to order certified copies in Oklahoma
- 1
Ask the funeral home
The fastest option. Most funeral homes will order certified copies on your behalf. Ask for 10–15 copies.
- 2
Contact the Oklahoma Vital Records Service
Order directly from Oklahoma's vital records office by phone at 405-426-8880 or through its website. Bring a valid photo ID and proof of relationship to the decedent.
- 3
Order online via VitalChek
An authorized service accepted by most states. Convenient but may take 2–4 weeks and adds a processing fee on top of the state fee.
Before you order
- Certified, not photocopied. A certified copy has a raised seal, watermark, or stamp. Most institutions reject plain photocopies or printouts.
- Order from the state of death. If the person died in a different state than where they lived, request copies from the state where the death occurred.
- Get more than you think. Every bank, insurer, and agency wants its own original. Extra copies are cheap compared to the delay of re-ordering.
Know exactly who needs a copy
Estate Assist reads the Oklahomaestate's documents, builds a personalized checklist of every institution to notify, and drafts the letters for you — so you know precisely how many certified copies to order and where each one goes.
Start your free action plan →Oklahoma death certificate FAQ
How much does a death certificate cost in Oklahoma?
A certified copy costs approximately $20 through the Oklahoma Vital Records Service. Additional copies are often the same price, and ordering several at once saves return trips.
How many certified copies should I order in Oklahoma?
Most families need 10–15 certified copies. Each bank, insurer, court, and government agency typically requires an original certified copy — not a photocopy — so ordering extras up front prevents delays.
Where are death certificates filed in Oklahoma?
Death certificates are issued by the vital records office in the state where the person died — not necessarily where they lived. In Oklahoma that office is the Oklahoma Vital Records Service.
What is the fastest way to get certified copies?
The funeral home is usually fastest — most will order certified copies on your behalf at the time of death. You can also order in person from the county or state vital records office, or online through VitalChek (which adds a processing fee and can take 2–4 weeks).
Other states
Content checked against official state sources on July 16, 2026. Fees and office details change; confirm current requirements on the official Oklahoma vital records website before ordering. Estate Assist provides general information, not legal advice.