Find Concord Death Certificates

Concord death records are managed by the Cabarrus County Register of Deeds. Concord is the county seat and the primary location for vital records services in Cabarrus County. Death certificates have been filed here since late 1913 under the state vital records mandate. Residents can visit the office in person, order by mail, or pay with a credit card at the counter. This page walks through the process of obtaining death records in Concord.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Concord Death Records Office

The Cabarrus County Register of Deeds is at 65 Church Street SE, Concord, NC 28025. The phone number is 704-920-2112. This is the main office for all death certificate requests in Cabarrus County.

Certified copies of Concord death certificates cost $10. Uncertified copies cost $1. The office accepts cash, checks, Visa, and MasterCard. This gives you several payment options when you visit in person.

Death records at the Concord office go back to late 1913. That is when North Carolina started to require counties to file vital records under what is now G.S. 130A Article 4. Marriage records go back even further, to 1792. The office has a long history of serving the Concord community.

The Cabarrus County vital records page has forms, hours, and more details about the office. Check it before your visit to make sure you have what you need.

Cabarrus County Vital Records

The Cabarrus County Register of Deeds provides death certificate services for all of Concord and the surrounding county. Below is the county vital records information page.

Cabarrus County Register of Deeds vital records page for Concord death records

This office serves Concord as well as Kannapolis, Harrisburg, and other towns in Cabarrus County. The Concord location is the only Register of Deeds office in the county, so all requests come through here.

Request Death Certificates in Concord

Visit the Register of Deeds at 65 Church Street SE in Concord. Bring a valid photo ID. You will need to fill out a request form with the following details:

  • Full name of the deceased
  • Date of death or approximate year
  • Place of death in Cabarrus County
  • Your relationship to the deceased
  • Your signature

Staff will search the index and pull the record. In most cases, you can get a copy during the same visit. For older records near the start of the 1913 collection, the search may take a bit longer.

You can also mail your request to 65 Church Street SE, Concord, NC 28025. Include a check or money order for $10 per certified copy and a copy of your ID. The office mails the certificate back to you once it is ready.

Note: The Cabarrus County office can also search the Statewide Birth Database for out-of-county births from 1971 onward; for out-of-county death records, contact the county where the death took place or the state Vital Records office.

Concord Death Records and State Law

Death records in Concord follow North Carolina vital records law. G.S. 130A-93 controls who can get a certified copy. The list includes close family members, legal agents, funeral directors, and government agencies. Everyone else must use the uncertified copy option under G.S. 130A-93.1.

The Cabarrus County Register of Deeds checks each request against these rules. When you ask for a certified death certificate in Concord, you must prove your identity and your connection to the deceased. This protects privacy as required by state law.

G.S. 130A-26A allows counties to use electronic systems for vital records. This gives Cabarrus County the authority to accept credit card payments and offer digital tools for record searches. The full text of Chapter 130A is online at the General Assembly website.

Concord Death Records for Genealogy

Death certificates from Concord are a key tool for tracing family history in Cabarrus County. Each record lists the name, date and place of death, cause of death, and parent names. These details help researchers connect generations.

Uncertified copies cost just $1 at the Concord office. This is a low price for genealogy research. You can order several records without a large expense. The staff can help you search the index to find the records you need.

The North Carolina State Archives holds older vital records on microfilm. For Concord deaths before late 1913, the archives, church records, and cemetery logs are your best sources. The Cabarrus County Public Library may also have local history collections that support genealogy work in the Concord area.

Cabarrus County marriage records go back to 1792, which means the Register of Deeds has a long history of record keeping. Even though death records only start in 1913, the office is well set up to help researchers who are working through multiple types of records in Concord.

Note: The North Carolina Association of Registers of Deeds can direct you to the correct county office if the death did not happen in Cabarrus County.

What Concord Death Certificates Contain

A death certificate from the Cabarrus County office lists the full legal name of the deceased, the date and place of death, the cause of death, and the names of both parents. The record also notes the attending physician, the funeral home, and the place of burial or cremation. These details serve both legal and personal needs.

Certified copies carry the official seal and are required for estate settlement, insurance claims, and government filings. Uncertified copies hold the same facts without the seal. They are accepted for personal records and research but not for legal proceedings. At $1 each, uncertified copies from Concord are an affordable choice for anyone who needs death records for non-legal purposes.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Cabarrus County Death Records

Concord is the county seat of Cabarrus County. All death certificates for the city and the wider county go through the Cabarrus County Register of Deeds. For full county details on vital records, fees, and resources, visit the Cabarrus County death records page.

View Cabarrus County Death Records