Records of death are detailed files about a person who is deceased. Usually, they are found in the form of the social security death records.

These social security death records are a complete record of all the private details known by the social security agencies, and are released into the public domain when a person dies. Officially, this is done to prevent identity fraud, as many tricksters like to take on the identity of dead people to commit crimes. With these records of death available to anyone who wants to know, it becomes much more difficult to do this.

However, there are other uses for these records. For instance, lots of people like to use them as a tool for researching their family trees. Other people use them when looking for a missing person, as the first step in such a search is to eliminate the possibility that the missing person is in fact dead.

Whatever the reason for using these records of death, the method of searching through them is the same. To access them, all you need to do is go to the official social security death records website and do a search.

In order to find the records you are interested in, you will need to know quite a lot of information about the person you are searching for - data like last known address, full name, place where death was registered, etc. For this reason, some people have found it to be a slow process to search through these records.

Also, the information given in these social security death records is only a part of the picture that is possible to attain from the full array of public records that are available to you.

That is why so many people are turning to a more comprehensive online service, that cross references all the entries relating to a person from all publicly available sources including the records of death. Using these services is like having an army of private detectives working for you, only it's all done by computers.

There is a small fee to use services like these, but it is small potatoes compared to all the time you would have wasted stumbling through the social security death records otherwise!

Click here to see which service I personally recommend.