The Vatican said that Francis has changed the catechism of the Catholic Church - the compilation of official Catholic teaching.
Previously, the catechism said the church did not exclude recourse to capital punishment "if this is the only possible way of effectively defending human lives against the unjust aggressor".
The new teaching says the previous policy is outdated and that there are other ways to protect society.
It adds: "Consequently the church teaches, in the light of the Gospel, that the death penalty is inadmissible because it is an attack on the inviolability and dignity of the person, and she works with determination for its abolition worldwide."
In an accompanying letter explaining the change, the head of the Vatican's doctrine office said the development of Catholic doctrine on capital punishment did not contradict prior teaching, but rather was an evolution of it.
"If, in fact the political and social situation of the past made the death penalty an acceptable means for the protection of the common good, today the increasing understanding that the dignity of a person is not lost even after committing the most serious crimes," said Cardinal Luis Ladaria, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Francis has for a long time criticised the death penalty, insisting it can never be justified, no matter how heinous the crime.
He has also made prison ministry a mainstay of his vocation. On nearly every foreign trip, Francis has visited inmates to offer words of solidarity and hope, and he still stays in touch with a group of Argentine inmates he ministered to during his years as archbishop of Buenos Aires.
He announced his intention to change church teaching on capital punishment last October, when he marked the 25th anniversary of the publication of the catechism by announcing his intention to update it. The catechism, first promulgated by St John Paul II, gives Catholics an easy, go-to guide for church teaching on everything from the sacraments to sex.
At that 2017 ceremony, Francis said the death penalty violates the Gospel and amounts to the voluntary killing of a human life, which "is always sacred in the eyes of the creator".
He acknowledged that in the past even the Papal States had allowed this "extreme and inhuman recourse". But he said the Holy See had erred in allowing a mentality that was "more legalistic than Christian" and now knew better.
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