Certificate guide
Marriage Certificates in the United States
A plain-English guide to requesting a certified copy of a marriage record from any U.S. county or state vital records office. Pick the state where the event was registered to see county-specific request instructions, fees, and eligibility rules.
Who is eligible to request this record
Either spouse named on the marriage record, an adult child of the couple, a parent of either spouse, or a legal representative acting on behalf of one of the spouses may obtain a certified copy.
Common reasons people order marriage certificates
- Adding or removing a spouse from health insurance or a pension plan
- Filing for a name change at the Social Security Administration or DMV
- Sponsoring a spouse for an immigration or visa petition
- Filing joint state or federal tax returns
- Submitting evidence of marital status for divorce or estate proceedings
What every request looks like
Across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. territories, the underlying request flow for a certified marriage certificate is the same. You complete an application that lists the basic facts of the event, you provide a photocopy of valid government-issued photo identification, you pay a state-set fee per copy, and you submit the request to the office that holds the original record.
For marriage records, that office is most often the county clerk, probate judge, or county recorder that originally issued the marriage license — the state vital records office may only hold a verification rather than the certified license itself. Use the state directory below to identify the correct office for your situation.
Documents and information you will need
- Full legal name as it appears on the original record (including maiden names where applicable).
- Date of the event — or your best estimate of the year if exact date is unknown.
- City, town, or county where the event was registered.
- Name(s) of parents or spouse(s) shown on the original record.
- A clear photocopy of your government-issued photo identification.
- Payment by personal check, money order, cashier’s check, or credit card (online portals).
- A self-addressed stamped envelope when mailing the request.
Browse by state
Pick a state to see fees, the issuing office, and a directory of all county-equivalents within it.