Nova Scotia
Public access: Varies (older records publicly accessible through Archives)
Official Records Office
Service Nova Scotia — Vital Statistics
Issues certified birth certificates for Nova Scotia registrations.
Visit official site ↗How to Get Records
- 1
For births between 1864–1876: search the Nova Scotia Archives vital statistics database — these are the first civil registrations.
- 2
For births between 1877–1908: civil registration was not required. Search church records on FamilySearch or contact the Archives. Delayed registrations exist for this period.
- 3
For births from 1909 onward: search the Archives database or apply directly to Service Nova Scotia.
- 4
Order a certified copy through the Nova Scotia Archives for historical records, or Service Nova Scotia for recent records.
Resources
Tips
- •Nova Scotia has strong Scottish, Acadian, and Loyalist communities — each with different church record traditions (Presbyterian/United Church, Catholic, Anglican).
- •The gap period (1877–1908) is the most challenging. Baptismal records from local churches are often the best evidence. Nova Scotia Archives has significant church record holdings.
- •Census records (1871, 1881, 1891, 1901) on FamilySearch and Ancestry can help place ancestors and estimate birth years when registration records are missing.