The "Social Security Death Index" to which you refer is not a record of the Social Security Administration. The Death Index was created by a company or organization that received a copy of the Social Security Death Master File. The death index contains a listing of most people who had a Social Security number and who are deceased and whose death was reported to the Social Security Administration.
The Social Security Administration (Social Security Administration) maintains a Death Master File, a record of approximately 70 million deaths that were reported to Social Security Administration.
Although Social Security's Death Master File is not available online, you can get the Social Security Administration Death Master File Extract from the Social Security Administration’s distributor, the United States Department of Commerce’s National Technical Information Service (NTIS). For a fee, you can
- Search the data on the NTIS website,
www.ntis.gov/products/ssa-dmf.asp, or - Buy a copy of the Social Security Administration Death Master File Extract and subsequent updates from NTIS. The data is available from NTIS as a
- CD-ROM,
- 3480/3490 cartridge,
- magnetic tape, or
- electronic download.
To get access to the online Social Security Administration Death Master File Extract or buy a copy of it, you should
- Contact NTIS through their website at www.ntis.gov/products/pages/ssa-death-master.asp,
- Call the NTIS Subscriptions Department at 1-800-363-2068 or 703-605-6060 (8:30 AM - 5 PM, EST, Monday-Friday), or
- Write to NTIS at 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, Virginia 22161.
Warning: Others have purchased the Social Security Administration Death Master File Extract through NTIS, posted it on their own websites, and then referred to their websites as Social Security Administration’s death index or Social Security Administration’s Death Master File.
Social Security does not endorse these private websites. Social Security cannot confirm that these private sites are kept up to date or accurate in any way.
Other records potentially available from Social Security include the Application for a Social Security Card (form SS-5) and information from the "claims folder" for past recipients of benefits. In any case, to obtain any of this information from Social Security you will need to file a Freedom of Information Act request. The detailed procedures for doing so are:
To Request Form SS-5
To search the Social Security Administration’s records for the information you want, Social Security needs certain identifying information. The Social Security Administration’s records are filed by Social Security numbers (SSNs) rather than by names. If you can provide the person's SSN, Social Security will search their records for any information they might have. Without an SSN, Social Security will need the person's full name, date and place of birth, and parents' full names to locate the record. If you can provide the necessary identifying information, Social Security will search for the number. Social Security cannot search for a SSN for people born before 1865. Social Security did not begin keeping records until 1936; therefore, Social Security has no records about people who died before then.
A deceased person does not have any privacy rights. Therefore, if he or she applied for an SSN, Social Security can generally provide a copy of the Application for a Social Security Card (Form SS-5). This document contains the person's name, date and place of birth, and parents' names that were given when he or she applied for the number.
There is a form available to request copies of applications for a Social Security Number (Form SS-5) for people who are deceased. Form Social Security Administration-711 (Adobe reader required to view) may be used for this purpose; however, you do not need to use the form. Address your request to:
Social Security Administration
OEO FOIA Workgroup
300 N. Green Street
P.O. Box 33022
Baltimore, Maryland 21290-3022
You will be charged the cost of searching the Social Security Administration’s records for a form SS-5 even if Social Security is unable to locate any information on the person you are asking about. The fee for searching the Social Security Administration’s records is $27 when the SSN is known and $29 when the number is unknown or is incorrect.
(Note: Social Security cannot release information on living persons without their written consent.)
To Request a Computer Extract
You can also request a computer extract, or numident, of information from the original application for a Social Security card. Many records of older individuals, primarily those born in 1910 or earlier, are abbreviated records that do not contain the names of the individual's parents and may not contain the place of birth. You will be charged the cost of searching Social Security records for a numident even if Social Security is unable to locate any information on the person you are asking about. The fee for searching Social Security records is $16 when the SSN is known and $18 when the number is unknown or is incorrect.
To Request Material From a Claim File
The fee to search for a claim file is $14 when you provide the SSN. You may be charged 10 cents a page for copies. Please note that most claim files are destroyed within a few years of the final decision on the claim, so Social Security will not have a claim file for most people. Send requests for claim files to:
Social Security Administration
Freedom of Information Officer
6401 Security Blvd.
Baltimore, MD 21235
How To Pay
The check or money order should be made payable to the Social Security Administration. Social Security will also accept VISA, MasterCard, Discover, American Express or Diners Club. Please include the appropriate credit card number, along with the expiration date of the credit card with your written request.