Pennsylvania · Beaver County

Birth Certificate — Beaver County

A practical guide to requesting a certified copy of a birth record for events that took place in Beaver County, Pennsylvania. Use this page as a step-by-step checklist before you submit anything to the state or county office.

Who can request this record

For a certified copy of a birth certificate, the requester is generally limited to the person named on the record, a parent listed on the record, a legal guardian, an adult child, a sibling, a spouse, or a legal representative acting on behalf of one of those parties. Other parties may be limited to non-certified informational copies, or to a certified copy after the restricted-access window has expired under Pennsylvania law.

Where the record is held

Certified birth certificates for events that occurred in Beaver County are issued by the Pennsylvania Division of Vital Records, located at 101 South Mercer Street, Room 401, P.O. Box 1528, New Castle, PA 16103. The state office maintains the official register of births from approximately 1906 onward. Statewide vital records since January 1906. Marriage records held by the Marriage License Clerk of the Orphans Court in the county where the license was issued.

Common reasons people order this certificate

  • Applying for a U.S. passport or REAL ID compliant driver license
  • Enrolling a child in school or a youth sports league
  • Establishing eligibility for Social Security or other federal benefits
  • Confirming citizenship for employment or military service (Form I-9)
  • Genealogy research and probate proceedings

Step-by-step procedure

  1. Confirm you are an eligible requester. Re-read the eligibility section above and gather any documents that establish your relationship to the registrant — for example, a copy of your own birth certificate, a marriage license, or a power of attorney.
  2. Download the official application form. Visit the Pennsylvania vital records website at https://www.health.pa.gov/topics/certificates/Pages/Vital-Records.aspx and download the current application for a birth certificate. Print and complete every required field. Forms with missing fields are returned unprocessed.
  3. Make a clear photocopy of your government-issued photo ID. A driver license, state ID card, U.S. passport, military ID, or permanent resident card is typically required. Some counties require a notary acknowledgement on the application instead of, or in addition to, the ID copy.
  4. Prepare payment. The base state fee for a certified birth certificate in Pennsylvania is $20.00 per copy. Payment is normally accepted by personal check, cashier’s check, or money order made payable to the issuing office. Online portals accept credit and debit cards with an additional service surcharge.
  5. Submit your request. Mail the completed application, ID copy, payment, and a self-addressed stamped envelope to Pennsylvania Division of Vital Records, 101 South Mercer Street, Room 401, P.O. Box 1528, New Castle, PA 16103. Walk-in service is also available at the state office during business hours, and most counties accept walk-in requests at the county office that holds the original record.
  6. Track your order. Mail-in requests are typically processed within 2 to 6 weeks of receipt. In-person requests can usually be filled the same day. Online orders through a state-approved vendor are usually delivered in 5 to 10 business days.

Cost summary for Beaver County

The base state fee is $20.00 per certified copy. Many requesters need more than one copy:

  • Order at least two copies if the certificate will travel through different agencies in parallel.
  • One certified copy is usually enough for a passport application; keep a second on file at home.
  • REAL ID applicants should bring an original certified copy — photocopies are not accepted.

What to do if your record cannot be located

If the issuing office returns your request as “no record found,” the most common cause is a name spelling, date, or place-of-event mismatch. Resubmit with: alternate name spellings, a year range rather than an exact date, the parents’ or spouses’ full names, and the city or town within Beaver County where the event was registered. For events that pre-date statewide registration in Pennsylvania (around 1906), contact the county clerk, register of deeds, or local archive for the original parish, town, or church record.