Hull Town Clerk’s Office

253 Atlantic Ave, Hull, Massachusetts, 2045

★★★★★3.0(10)
Hull Town Clerk’s Office in Hull, Massachusetts

Contact & location

Address
253 Atlantic Ave, Hull, Massachusetts, 2045
Records for
Plymouth County, Massachusetts
See all county & circuit clerk offices in Massachusetts

Last verified July 14, 2026

This office issues Massachusetts state records

Plymouth County follows Massachusetts’s fees, eligibility rules and processing times. Compare the statewide baseline below before choosing where to go.

$32.00
Massachusetts birth certificate fee
10–15 days
Statewide processing
7,136,171
Massachusetts population

This office charges $10.00 $22.00 less than the Massachusetts fee.

See full Massachusetts requirements, IDs & fees →

Office hours

via Google
Monday7:45am - 5:00pm
Tuesday7:45am - 5:00pm
Wednesday7:45am - 5:00pm
Thursday7:45am - 5:00pm
Fridayclosed
Saturdayclosed
Sundayclosed

Monday - Thursday 7:45 AM - 5:00 PM Friday - Closed

Certificates, fees & processing

RecordFeeProcessing
Birth Certificate$10.0010–15 daysMassachusetts estimate
Death Certificate$10.0010–15 daysMassachusetts estimate
Marriage Certificate$10.001–2 monthsMassachusetts estimate

Processing times are set at state level — county offices do not publish their own — and are estimates that vary with demand.

The Hull Town Clerk’s Office’s office or registry of vital records, offers a wide range of crucial services. These offices play a vital role in the protection and provision of essential documents such as birth certificates, death certificates, and marriage certificates . In addition to maintaining these primary records, they are responsible for managing and issuing copies of birth, marriage, and death records that occurred within the Township of Hull. Alongside record maintenance, this office provides valuable services like issuing certified copies of documents, overseeing the registration of domestic partnerships, and offering assistance to rectify any errors detected in vital records. Through these comprehensive services, the vital records office ensures the accuracy, accessibility, and integrity of vital records for the benefit of the community.

Reviews

★★★★★3.0 (10)
  • ★★★★S.L. RicciarelliGoogle

    Bathhouse on Nantasket Beach. This man is in the ladies room cleaning with women in the stalls, disturbing! He always closes long before the posted sign time and argued with my disabled friend when she asked to be let in on one of these occasions. He shouldn't have this job..

  • ★★★★PhylbisGoogle

    They are just out to make money, got a parking ticket for parking on a yellow curb, would make sense if they didnt have a15 minute parking sign right behind where i parked with arrows pointing in both directions.

  • ★★★★Jim MurphyGoogle

    It's a small town hall that is likely repurposed older building; large, wooden stairway at the end of the structure reminiscent of a school from the early 20th Century.

  • ★★★★Kevin LockeGoogle

    Sloppy government, self-dealing galore, no vote of confidence from townspeople. Of a population of around 10,000 residents, about 300 attend annual town meeting, dwindling to fewer than 100 by night three. Geographically, a gorgeous piece of land but zero open space due to the frenetic construction of really ugly condos, giving the own a patina of corruption and sloppiness; you’ll find a lot of blight. And no plan.. The place has the gritty vibe of South Boston in the early 60s. It’s a shame.

  • ★★★★Caroline LeeGoogle

    If you’re going to charge $100 parking tickets, you need to have clear and legible signs posted on every street. Not half ripped signs that look like an old yard sale sign. On May 22nd over 30 cars on this one street all got a ticket because they were tricked into thinking this street was free parking due to poorly marked signs. The hearing officer at the City Hall in Hull is rude and unprofessional. He claimed that the attached photo is legible. When I asked him to make out one word he could not. He then informed me that people purposely park on this street knowing they are going to get a $100 ticket so they can go to the beach. Which makes no sense as there was ample lot parking for $20 a couple yards away. He then said that it would be unfair to appeal my ticket when he didn’t appeal anyone else that day. Shouldn’t each individual case be looked at separately and fairly? What’s the point of making people waste their time with the appeal process if you’re going to deny everyone to start with. Use the thousands of dollars you get in tickets and actually invest in clear, legible, sturdy metal signs. Not cardboard signs that can be easily tampered with and damaged.

Write a review