How Maine Vital Records Work

Maine vital records — birth, death, marriage and divorce certificates — are issued by the Maine Center for Disease Control & Prevention (Maine CDC), specifically its Office of Data, Research, and Vital Statistics (ODRVS), which sits inside the Maine Department of Health and Human Services [maine.gov]. Maine retains its New England town-clerk tradition: town and city clerks also record births, marriages and deaths that occur within their municipalities, so the local town office in the place of the event is often the fastest source for certified copies. There are no county-level vital-records offices in Maine.

Statewide vital-records agency
Maine CDC Office of Data, Research & Vital Statistics (ODRVS)
Parent agency
Maine Department of Health & Human Services
Local intake
Town/city clerk in town of event (New England model)
County-level vital records?
No — Maine uses towns, not counties, for vital records
Records back to
1892 (statewide registration begins)
Marriage license issued by
Town/city clerk of either party's town

How Maine Vital Records Work — Deep Dive

State-level: Office of Data, Research, and Vital Statistics

The Maine CDC Office of Data, Research, and Vital Statistics (ODRVS) is the statewide repository for all Maine vital records dating back to 1892 (births, deaths, marriages) and is the office that issues certified copies for events anywhere in the state [www1.maine.gov]. Requests can be made by mail, in person at the State House Complex in Augusta, or online through an approved third-party processor. Fees are set by statute; the standard certified copy fee applies to each additional copy ordered.

Local town/city clerks — Maine's New England model

Maine is one of the New England states that still routes vital-records intake through municipal clerks. The clerk in the town where a birth, marriage or death occurred files the original record locally and forwards a copy to the state ODRVS. That means for recent events, the town clerk's office often has the record available sooner and at a lower fee. Bar Harbor's town office, for example, publishes a public-facing vital-records page describing how to request copies [barharbormaine.gov], as does Bangor's City Clerk for marriage licenses and certificates [bangormaine.gov].

Marriage licenses — apply locally, certify locally or with the state

Marriage licenses in Maine are issued by the town/city clerk of the town where either party resides (or where the marriage will take place if neither party is a Maine resident). After the marriage is performed and the license returned by the officiant, the clerk files the record locally and transmits a copy to the state ODRVS. A certified marriage certificate can then be obtained from either the issuing town clerk or the Maine CDC ODRVS [maine.gov].

Frequently Asked Questions: Maine Vital Records

From the Office of Data, Research, and Vital Statistics at the Maine CDC for any event statewide, or from the town/city clerk where the event occurred for recent local events.

No. Unlike most states, Maine uses the New England town-clerk model — vital records are filed first with the municipal clerk and then transmitted to the state Maine CDC ODRVS. There are no county vital-records offices in Maine.

Apply at the town or city clerk where either of you lives. If neither party lives in Maine, apply in the town where the marriage will occur. The clerk issues the license; after the ceremony the officiant returns it for filing [bangormaine.gov].

Statewide registration of births, marriages and deaths began in 1892. Pre-1892 records survive only at the municipal level (town vital records) and in church records held by genealogical societies and the Maine State Archives.

Yes — the Maine CDC accepts orders through approved third-party processors linked from maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/vital-records. Direct mail or in-person requests to ODRVS in Augusta are also accepted.

Last reviewed:

Vital Records Databases

12 official Maine vital records sources.

Vital Records

Deaths | after 1960
Official Free
The meaning of SITE is the spatial location of an actual or planned structure or set of structures (such as a building, town, or monuments). How to use site in a sentence. Cite, Sight, and Site
Marriages | Index
Official Free
Search for Maine marriage records by name of bride or groom, town of bride or groom, and date range.
Deaths | Probate Records
Official Free
Search the Maine Probate records by name or case number and county. No charge for search, but a fee is charged for document copies.
Greene Births | 1730-1904
Official Free
Town of Greene, Maine Birth records for the years between 1730 and 1904.
Deaths | Index 1960-1997
Official Free
Search this RootsWeb database for Maine death records filed between 1960 and 1997. Search by name, place, and/or year.
Deaths | Cemetery Records
Official Free
Cemeteries in Maine including interment records, cemetery maps, and a number of burial site photographs.
South Portland Burials
Official Free
Use this City of South Portland, Maine service to search by name for Highland Memorial Cemetery burials or download in PDF or excel format the.
Bangor | Mount Hope Cemetery Records
Official Free
Search this Mount Hope Cemetery database of burials at Mount Hope Cemetery in Bangor Maine by name or keyword.