Locate Burlington Death Records

Burlington death records are kept by the Alamance County Register of Deeds. Burlington is the largest city in Alamance County and sits in the north-central part of the state. The Register of Deeds, David Barber, oversees vital records services from the office in Graham, the county seat. Death certificates are on file from 1913 to the present. Burlington residents can request copies in person, by mail, by email, or online through Permitium. This guide explains the process.

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Burlington Death Certificates at Alamance County

The Alamance County Register of Deeds is at 118 West Harden Street, Graham, NC 27253. The phone number is (336) 570-6565. The office is open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Graham is about 10 minutes west of Burlington.

Certified copies of Burlington death certificates cost $10 each. Uncertified copies cost $1. These are the standard fees under G.S. 130A Article 4. The office accepts multiple forms of payment for in-person visits.

You can reach the office by email at vitalrecords@Alamance-nc.com. This is a good way to ask questions about death records for Burlington or to confirm that a specific record is on file before you visit.

The Alamance County Permitium portal handles online death certificate orders. The service charges $4 plus $1 for VitalVerify, on top of the base $10 fee. Payment is by credit or debit card. This is the easiest option for Burlington residents who cannot get to Graham during office hours.

Alamance County Vital Records for Burlington

Burlington death records go through the Alamance County Register of Deeds in Graham. Below is the county office that processes these requests.

Alamance County Register of Deeds office for Burlington death records

The Alamance County office in Graham serves Burlington, Mebane, Elon, and all other towns in the county. It is the only Register of Deeds location in Alamance County.

Request Death Records in Burlington

To get a death certificate for a Burlington death, you can visit the Alamance County office in Graham, order online, or send a request by mail. Each method requires the same basic details.

You need to provide:

  • Full name of the deceased
  • Date of death
  • Place of death in Alamance County
  • Your relationship to the deceased
  • Valid photo ID

For in-person visits, go to 118 West Harden Street in Graham. Fill out a request form and pay the fee. Staff search the index and pull the death record. Most requests are handled quickly during the same visit.

Mail orders go to the same address. Include a check for $10 and a copy of your ID. The office mails the death certificate back to you once it is ready.

Under G.S. 130A-93, certified copies are limited to eligible requesters. Close family, legal agents, and government bodies qualify. If you do not qualify, ask for an uncertified copy under G.S. 130A-93.1. These cost $1 and work for personal or research purposes.

Note: The Alamance County Health Department does not handle death certificates; all requests must go through the Register of Deeds in Graham.

Burlington Death Records and State Law

North Carolina law governs how death records are managed in Burlington. G.S. 130A-93 sets the rules for certified copies. G.S. 130A-93.1 covers uncertified copies. G.S. 130A-26A supports electronic ordering, which Alamance County uses for the Permitium portal.

The Alamance County Register of Deeds checks every request against these statutes. Your identity and relationship to the deceased are verified before a certified death certificate is released. This process protects the privacy of the people named on the record.

The full text of Chapter 130A is on the General Assembly website. Burlington residents can review the law to understand who qualifies for certified death records.

Burlington Death Records for Genealogy

Death certificates from Burlington and Alamance County are useful for tracing family history. Records from 1913 onward list names, dates, places, parent names, and cause of death. These facts help connect generations in the Burlington area.

Uncertified copies at $1 each are a practical option for genealogy research. The Permitium portal also makes it simple to order from home. For older records before 1913, the North Carolina State Archives in Raleigh has microfilm collections. Church burial records and cemetery logs from the Burlington area can also help with pre-1913 research.

The Alamance County office staff can help you search the index if you are not sure exactly which records are on file. Call (336) 570-6565 or email vitalrecords@Alamance-nc.com for guidance before you place an order.

What Burlington Death Certificates Show

A death certificate from the Alamance County office lists the full name of the deceased, the date and place of death, the cause of death, and the names of parents. It also includes details about the attending physician and the place of burial or cremation. These facts serve legal, personal, and research needs.

Certified copies carry the official seal of the Register of Deeds and are accepted for legal use such as estate settlement, insurance claims, and government filings. Uncertified copies contain the same data but lack the seal. They are good for personal files and genealogy projects. Burlington residents can choose the type that fits their need when they place an order.

Older death records from the Burlington area may have some fields left blank. In the early years of the vital records system, not all data was collected. Even so, these records remain valuable for anyone researching family history in Alamance County.

Note: The North Carolina Vital Records fees page lists the state-level costs if you choose to order through the state office instead of the Alamance County Register of Deeds.

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Alamance County Death Records

Burlington is in Alamance County. All death certificates for the city go through the Alamance County Register of Deeds in Graham. For full county-level information on vital records services, fees, and resources, visit the Alamance County death records page.

View Alamance County Death Records