Newfoundland & Labrador
Public access: Varies
⚠ Important noteNewfoundland joined Canada on March 31, 1949. A person born in Newfoundland before that date was a British subject under the Dominion of Newfoundland — not automatically a Canadian citizen by birth. They may have become Canadian through naturalization after Confederation, or may qualify as Gen 0 through other pathways. If your line runs through a pre-1949 Newfoundland birth, confirm their citizenship status carefully before relying on this ancestry.
Official Records Office
Service NL — Vital Statistics Division
Issues birth certificates for registrations in Newfoundland & Labrador.
Visit official site ↗How to Get Records
- 1
Identify whether your ancestor was born before or after March 31, 1949 (Confederation with Canada).
- 2
For post-1949 births, apply through Service NL Vital Statistics with proof of relationship.
- 3
For pre-Confederation births, search church registers — the Church of England, Roman Catholic, and United Church records are most complete.
- 4
Contact the Newfoundland and Labrador Provincial Archives for access to historical records and indexes.
Resources
Service NL — Vital Statistics
Apply for Newfoundland & Labrador birth certificates.
Newfoundland and Labrador Provincial Archives
Holds historical government records, church records, and vital statistics.
FamilySearch — Newfoundland
Free access to Newfoundland church records and vital statistics.
Newfoundland Grand Banks Genealogy Site
Community-maintained database of Newfoundland genealogical records.
Tips
- •Formal civil registration in Newfoundland only began in 1892, and compliance was inconsistent for decades. Church records — especially Anglican and Roman Catholic — are often the only evidence for earlier births.
- •Labrador records are scattered between NL Archives, Moravian Church records (for the north coast), and Hudson's Bay Company files at Library and Archives Canada.
- •Census records (1935 and 1945 Newfoundland Census) are available and can help establish identity and family structure before Confederation.