State office vs. county office
Pinellas County sits within Florida, which means birth and death records are held by the state — the Florida Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics at 1217 N. Pearl St, Jacksonville, FL 32202, reachable at (904) 359-6900. The state agency holds the official copies of birth and death events that occurred anywhere in Pinellas County since statewide registration began in 1917.
Marriage licenses and divorce decrees, however, are typically handled at the county level: marriage licenses by the Pinellas County Clerk, divorces by the trial court (superior, circuit, or district court depending on Florida's naming convention) sitting in Pinellas County. Pick a record type below for the specific routing.
Records for Pinellas County
Birth Certificates
Birth certificate guide for Pinellas County.
Open guide → PinellasDeath Records
Death certificate guide for Pinellas County.
Open guide → PinellasMarriage Licenses
Marriage license guide for Pinellas County.
Open guide → PinellasDivorce Decrees
Divorce decree guide for Pinellas County.
Open guide →Quick reference
| State | Florida (FL) |
|---|---|
| Statewide office | Florida Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Statistics |
| State office address | 1217 N. Pearl St, Jacksonville, FL 32202 |
| State office phone | (904) 359-6900 |
| Statewide registration since | 1917 |
| Standard turnaround | 3-5 business days by mail; same-day in person |
About Pinellas County
Pinellas County is one of the larger counties in Florida by population, which means its courthouse handles a high volume of marriage license applications and divorce filings each year. Higher-volume counties typically offer more flexible request channels — in-person, mail, fax, and increasingly online — and frequently maintain a public-facing case search for civil filings, including divorce indexes.
If you are uncertain whether your event was filed in Pinellas County rather than a neighboring county, consider both the address listed on the original document (if you have a copy) and where the parties were living at the time of filing. For old marriage licenses in particular, the license was issued in the county where the couple applied — not necessarily where they were married.
If you are out of state and unable to visit the courthouse in person, this remote document-retrieval comparison outlines the trade-offs between mailing a request, using the state's approved online vendor, and hiring an authorized agent.
Tips for working with the county courthouse
- Call before you visit. County clerk and court clerk hours vary, and some windows close earlier than the rest of the courthouse for cash handling.
- Bring exact change or a money order for older records that may not be in the credit-card system.
- For divorces, know the case number if you can — the clerk may charge a per-name search fee on top of the per-page copy fee if a full lookup is required.
- For marriage records older than the county's digital index, expect a longer wait while staff retrieve the physical book.