Search Lawrence County Death Records
Lawrence County death records are at the health department in Moulton. Staff can find death certificates for deaths that took place anywhere in Alabama.
Lawrence County Quick Facts
Lawrence County Health Department
The Lawrence County Health Department is on Highway 157 in Moulton. About 33,000 people live here. The area sits in north Alabama. Part of the William B. Bankhead National Forest is in Lawrence County. The health department uses the state ViSION system. Staff can look up Lawrence County death certificates and print them for you.
You can get a death certificate from here for deaths in any county in Alabama. Most in-person requests take less than an hour. The office is part of the Alabama Department of Public Health network. They follow state rules for who can get copies of death records in Lawrence County.
| Address | 13299 Alabama Highway 157 Moulton, AL 35650 |
|---|---|
| Phone | (256) 560-6409 |
| Environmental | (256) 974-8849 |
| Hours | Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM |
| Website | alabamapublichealth.gov/lawrence |
How to Get Death Certificates
You can get Lawrence County death records in three ways. Pick the one that works best based on time and travel.
In Person Requests
Go in person. This is the fast way. Bring a photo ID like a license or state ID. Know the name of the person who died. You need the date of death and their age too. Staff can print the record while you wait. Most visits take 15 to 30 minutes in Lawrence County. You can pay with cash, check, or money order in Alabama.
Mail Requests
Send your request to Montgomery. The state office is the Center for Health Statistics. Download the form from the state site. Fill it out. Add a check for $15. Make it out to Center for Health Statistics. Mail to P.O. Box 5625, Montgomery, AL 36103-5625. It takes 7 to 10 days in Alabama.
Online Orders
VitalChek is the state vendor. Go to their site or call 1-888-279-9888. You can use a credit or debit card. Standard orders take 7 to 10 days. Rush orders cost more. VitalChek adds fees on top of the $15 state fee. This is a good option if you cannot visit Lawrence County in person.
Who May Request Death Records
State law sets rules for Lawrence County death records. Under Alabama Code Section 22-9A-21, death certificates stay private for 25 years. After that, anyone can get a copy. The record becomes public at that point in Alabama.
For deaths in the past 25 years, only some people may get Lawrence County death certificates. The list is shown below:
- Parents of the deceased
- Spouse of the deceased
- Children and grandchildren
- Brothers and sisters
- Legal reps of the estate
- The informant listed on the certificate
- Others who show a direct interest in Alabama
State and local agencies can get records for work. Researchers may ask for data with a written deal. Firms that want mailing lists cannot get death records in Lawrence County.
Death Certificate Fees
The State Board of Health sets fees for Lawrence County death records. Alabama Code Section 22-9A-23 controls these rates. They are the same at any county office or the state office in Alabama.
| Service | Fee |
|---|---|
| Search with one certified copy | $15.00 |
| Additional copies in same order | $6.00 each |
| Expedited processing | $15.00 extra |
| Amendment | $20.00 |
You pay even if no record is found. You get a Certificate of Failure to Find. Fees are not given back in Lawrence County. VitalChek adds its own charges in Alabama.
Historical Death Records
Alabama started death records on January 1, 1908. Lawrence County death records from that date are at the state office. Records over 25 years old are now public in Alabama.
To find death info from before 1908, you must look at other sources. Some early death logs exist from 1881, but not all deaths were in them. Good places to search for old Lawrence County death records are listed below:
- Probate court wills and estate records
- Church burial records
- Cemetery records and tombstones
- Newspaper obituaries
- Federal mortality schedules from 1850 to 1880
The Alabama Department of Archives and History has microfilm of old records. FamilySearch has a free database called Alabama Deaths, 1908-1974 in Alabama.
Death Investigations
The Lawrence County coroner looks into certain deaths. These include deaths from violence, accidents, suicide, or unknown causes. Alabama uses an elected coroner system in most counties. The coroner finds the cause and manner of death in Lawrence County.
If an autopsy is needed, the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences helps. The Huntsville lab serves Lawrence County. They handle autopsies and forensic tests for death cases in Alabama.
Nearby Counties
Lawrence County borders other north Alabama counties. All county health departments use the same state database. You can get death records from any site in Alabama.
Start Your Search
Use the tool below to find death records in Lawrence County or other parts of Alabama.