City of Lebanon City Hall

Level 2 51 N. Park St., Lebanon, New Hampshire, 3766

★★★★★2.7(25)
City of Lebanon City Hall in Lebanon, New Hampshire

Contact & location

Address
Level 2 51 N. Park St., Lebanon, New Hampshire, 3766
Mail-in address
City of Lebanon City HallLevel 2 51 N. Park St., Lebanon, New Hampshire, 3766
Records for
Grafton County, New Hampshire

Last verified July 14, 2026

This office issues New Hampshire state records

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

$15.00
New Hampshire birth certificate fee
3–5 weeks
Statewide processing
1,409,032
New Hampshire population
See full New Hampshire requirements, IDs & fees →

Office hours

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

Certificates, fees & processing

RecordFeeProcessing
Birth Certificate$15.003–5 weeksNew Hampshire estimate
Death Certificate$15.003–5 weeksNew Hampshire estimate
Marriage Certificate$15.003–5 weeksNew Hampshire estimate
Divorce Record$15.003–5 weeksNew Hampshire estimate

Processing times are set at state level — county offices do not publish their own — and are estimates that vary with demand.

The City of Lebanon City Hall ’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 Lebanon. 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

★★★★★2.7 (25)
  • ★★★★★Madeline KotlasGoogle

    These are nice and generous public servants who deserve our respect. If they seem rude, it is because they are underpaid, understaffed, unappreciated. Our clerks should be treated as they deserve: with respect. The citizens of this town owe much to the municipal workers. It's not a restaurant or tourist venue. It's our local government. Humans working hard for you so that you have the time and luxury to whine and complain about them. Blame the game, not the players. Save your breath for meaningful gripes. Stay safe and well, and please help other neighbors to stay so as well.

  • ★★★★★Amelia WarfieldGoogle

    Lebanon City Hall is very beautiful.

  • ★★★★logan vitaleGoogle

    If you are active duty military (unlikely in this area) good luck trying to get anything done at this location. I’ve had no issues trying to register a car anywhere else in New Hampshire, but for whatever reason this place refuses to do it and gave me an extremely hard time about proof of residency. I would drive to California to do a basic task before going here for anything regarding the military.

  • ★★★★Sam BentGoogle

    This is the level of service you can expect from these people if you ask them who they are or what they do for the people who's tax money pays their salaries! Very disappointed to see how rude, and unprofessional everyone in this office was.

  • ★★★★★Rebecca KattamisGoogle

    Today, I had the opportunity of calling the Clerk's Office at City Hall. I am happy to report they picked up the phone right away. So, no issue here like with the Planning and Development Office! Do I feel the person on the other end of the phone picked up with a smile and 'ready to help' public service attitude? No, not at all. There seemed to be an edge, however, I wouldn't describe it as rude. I informed the woman, Jessica, that I was looking for historical property tax data on my home. Without asking what years or whether I'm at a computer, she immediately started to give me navigation instructions on how to navigate to the tax bill section on the City website (there was this kind of 'duh' attitude about it). Already knowing the answer, I asked if the website would give me data as far back as 2011. She had to back track and then told me how to navigate to the 'Contact Us' webpage to put in a request. I'm requesting public information so I'm not sure why they can't take requests over the phone or in-person, but those options weren't offered. Having worked in customer service for many years, I can't say that I'm impressed with service experience. Email your request and wait. I must have seen 2-3 women wandering around the Clerk's Office when I was there 2 days ago to pay my utilities (coming off of a weekend). Maybe they should reassess staffing levels as offering little over the phone other than to push people towards email requests requires less people to man a phone or desk. Dartmouth Health has done this all over their operations to save money. PS you can make a similar historical request over the phone with the City Assessing Office (with only 1 full-time employee, by the way) and they don't push you to a 'Contact Page' on the website. They take your information and email you the requested information within the same day of getting off of the phone. Now, that, is public service. Sadly, this will probably change because the Assessing Office full-time public servant is getting ready to retire within the next couple years.

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