Certificates

In England and Wales, official records of births, deaths and marriages began on 1 July 1837, and Civil Partnership records from 5 December 2005. Separate systems operate for Scotland and Northern Ireland.

The country is divided into registration districts. Each has its own Superintendent Registrar, who is responsible for the original registers belonging to the district. They contain the records of births, marriages and deaths from 1 July 1837.

If you know the area where the event took place, you need to apply to the Superintendent Registrar of that district. The Superintendent Registrar will give you a certified copy of that entry from his/her records. There is a charge for this service (see below).

Kent County Council (KCC) has a certificate centre at the Mansion House in Tunbridge Wells which holds all the completed registers for Kent and Bexley since 1 July 1837 and can supply a certified copy of any Kent and Bexley birth, death or marriage entry from any register within its custody or a Kent civil partnership registration from the government online database.

Registers of births, deaths and marriages are either:

  • Incomplete - still being used by a Registrar or Church, or
  • Complete - stored in the Kent County Council Certificate Centre in Tunbridge Wells.

(Please note: Kent does not include the Medway Towns (Chatham, Gillingham, Rochester and Strood) or the London Boroughs of Bromley and Greenwich who hold their own records for births, deaths and marriages going back to 1 July 1837, and Civil Partnerships from 5 December 2005.)

Find out how to apply for certificates.

 

What about births, deaths and marriages before 1837?

Events that happened before 1 July 1837 may have been recorded in church baptismal, marriage and burial registers, which are kept by the local county Archivist. Early census returns can sometimes prove useful sources of information. Staff at the Kent History and Library Centre in Maidstone will be able to advise you on this.

 

Overpriced certificates

A number of websites are offering certificates at inflated prices and the Local Authorities Coordinators of Regulatory Services (LACORS) has issued the following press release.

LACORS today warned consumers against purchasing expensive copies of birth, death and marriage certificates via the internet.

A number of websites are offering users the chance to purchase copies of certificates with prices ranging from £19 to £60. However, contacting the council's Registration Service where the event was registered will only cost you the statutory fee.

Councillor Geoffrey Theobald OBE says: "There is no reason why people should be paying extra for this service. Obtaining a copy of a birth, marriage or death certificate is relatively straightforward going through a local authority. Not only is it easier but also much cheaper and I would encourage people not to waste their money".

Rate this page...

Contact us

Kent Libraries, Registration and Archives

Kent History and Library Centre
James Whatman Way
Maidstone
ME14 1LQ

0300 333 5430 for appointments in Kent

Text relay: 18001 0300 333 5430

0300 333 5646 for appointments in Bexley

Text relay: 18001 0300 333 5646

register.office @kent.gov.uk