Home/ Missouri/ St. Louis City County/ Birth Certificates

Birth certificate in St. Louis City County, Missouri

How to request a certified birth certificate for an event that occurred in St. Louis City County, Missouri.

Where to request

Birth certificates for people born in St. Louis City County are issued by the Missouri Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Records, the central state agency in Missouri. The county itself does not maintain a separate registry of certified birth certificates; all requests are routed through the state office.

If the birth occurred before statewide registration began in 1910, the state office will refer you to the St. Louis City County Clerk or to the Missouri State Archives, where pre-registration records (when they exist) are typically held.

Issuing office details

Primary officeMissouri Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Records
State address930 Wildwood Dr, Jefferson City, MO 65109
State phone(573) 751-6387
State websitehttps://health.mo.gov/data/vitalrecords/
Standard turnaround5-7 weeks by mail

Fees

  • Birth records: $15
  • Death records: $14
  • Marriage records: $15 (1948-present)
  • Divorce records: $15 (1948-present)

Counties may charge their own fees in addition to or in place of the state fee for marriage and divorce records. Confirm with the St. Louis City County Clerk's office before mailing payment.

How to order

By mail

Download the application form from the official Missouri office page at https://health.mo.gov/data/vitalrecords/ (for state-issued records) or from the St. Louis City County website (for county-issued marriage and divorce records). Include a clear photocopy of an acceptable photo ID and a money order for the fee.

In person

For state-issued records, walk-in service is available at the central office in the state capital — see the address in the table above. For county-issued marriage and divorce records, walk-in service is available at the St. Louis City County courthouse during regular business hours; bring photo ID and the fee in cash, money order, or card.

Online

Missouri's state office partners with VitalChek for expedited online ordering of birth and death certificates. Many county clerks now also offer online ordering for marriage records through their own portals or through VitalChek; check the St. Louis City County Clerk's website for the current option.

What you'll need

  • Full legal name on the certificate, including any maiden or alternative names.
  • Date of the event (or a date range, for older or uncertain records).
  • Place of the event — at minimum, the city or township within St. Louis City County.
  • For births: parents' full names, including mother's maiden name.
  • For deaths: spouse's name (if any) and approximate age at death.
  • For marriages: both spouses' full legal names at the time of marriage.
  • For divorces: case number if known, otherwise both parties' full legal names and the year of the divorce.
  • A clear copy of acceptable photo identification.
  • A money order or cashier's check for the fee, made payable as instructed by the office.

For estate executors handling multiple certified copies at once, this estate-administration document checklist explains how many certified copies you typically need and which institutions will accept a single copy versus require their own original.

Common pitfalls

The most common reasons a request to St. Louis City County or to the Missouri Department of Health, Bureau of Vital Records is delayed:

  • Wrong office. Sending a marriage record request to the state office in a county-issued state, or vice versa, simply gets the application returned weeks later.
  • Insufficient identification. Photocopies must be clear, in color where possible, and unexpired.
  • Wrong fee. Personal checks are sometimes refused; out-of-state checks even more often.
  • Restricted record. If you are not the registrant or an immediate family member, expect the office to require additional documentation of your eligibility.
Tip. Call (573) 751-6387 (state) or the St. Louis City County Clerk before mailing your request — a one-minute confirmation call can save weeks. Counties periodically change their hours, accepted payment methods, and online portals.