For almost everyone, the place to go for a birth certificate is the vital records office in the state, province, or country where you were born, not where you live now.

Main places to go

  • Local or state vital records office (often called Office of Vital Records, Registrar, or Civil Registry) where your birth was registered.
  • A city or county clerk’s office if your area handles birth records locally (for example, many U.S. cities and counties let you request copies directly in person or by mail).
  • Official government online portals that let you order a certified copy and have it mailed to you, usually listed on your state or country’s main government site.

Basic steps

  1. Find the official government page for birth certificates in the state/country where you were born (often linked from a national government or health department directory).
  1. Choose how you want to order: in person, by mail, or online (options depend on the location).
  1. Gather required details (full name at birth, date and place of birth, parents’ names) and accepted ID (driver’s license, passport, or alternative documents if you don’t have standard ID).
  1. Pay the fee listed on the official site, then the office mails or hands you a certified copy.

If you’re not sure where to start

  • Check your national or federal government site for a directory of vital records offices (for example, some governments host pages that link to each state or region’s office and application instructions).
  • If you were born in a specific city, you can also search “[city name] birth certificate office” to see if city hall or a local registry issues copies in person.

If you tell which country or state you were born in, a more step‑by‑step guide (with the exact office name and typical fees) can be tailored to your situation.

TL;DR: You go to the government vital records or civil registry office for the place where you were born (or its official online portal), provide your birth details and ID, pay a fee, and they issue a certified copy.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.