Marriage Documents
Legal Preliminaries (Notice)
The information provided on these pages is for general guidance
purposes only and is not a complete or exhaustive explanation
of current Marriage Law or Legislation.
- If you intend to marry in a Register Office, Approved Premises
or Approved Building within England or Wales, outside your
district(s) of residence, then you must book the officiating
Superintendent of that District before notices of marriage are
entered at your local Register Office. This is to ensure the
availability of Registrars.
- Before you can marry in a Register Office, Approved Premise or
Approved Building in England and Wales, you have to give formal
notice of your intention to marry. You do this by attesting a
“Notice of Marriage”.
- It is a legal requirement that notice of marriage is given
separately by each person to be married. The notice must be given
personally to the Superintendent Registrar of the District where
the couple usually reside, preferably on the same day.
- Each party must have been living in a Registration District, in
England or Wales, for 7 consecutive days immediately preceding
giving notice. If one party resides elsewhere in England or Wales,
for at least 7 days, a similar notice must be entered at the
Register Office for the other District.
- Once the notices are given a minimum of 15 clear days must
elapse before the marriage can take place. After the 15 clear days
are completed, authorities must be issued by the Superintendent
Registrar to each of the parties before the marriage can take
place.
- Notices of marriage are valid for one year and couples will be
expected to give their notices as soon as it is legally possible in
order to secure a booking.
- When you give notice in Wales, you may do so either in English,
or in English and Welsh. If notice is to be given bilingually, both
the person giving notice and the authorised person you see must be
able to understand the Welsh language. All registration authorities
in Wales have at least one Welsh speaking authorised person or
deputy.
- Please allow 30 minutes for your appointment to give
notice.
Documents to be Produced at the time of Giving Notice
When you go to the Register Office to give notice of marriage,
you will need the following documents:
- All persons are required to produce evidence of their name and
surname. A current valid full passport, together with a birth
certificate, would be acceptable. If there is no passport then
two original identity documents must be produced, one of which must
be a birth certificate together with one of the following: a full
driving licence, medical card, payslips.
- Proof of residence must be produced for each person, i.e.,
utility bills/bank statements showing name and address.
- Persons from abroad are required to produce identity documents
e.g. passport, identity card, Home Office travel
document.
- Persons under 18 years of age must submit written consent from
the appropriate parent/guardian/authority. The Superintendent
Registrar has forms for this purpose.
- Widowers or widows are required to produce proof of death of
their former spouse, e.g. death certificate certified by a
Registrar.
- Divorced persons are required to produce a Decree Absolute
bearing an original court seal. If the divorce took place in a
foreign country, the original documents should be produced and if
applicable, an English translation. Some foreign divorces require
clearance from the Registrar General and the Superintendent
Registrar can arrange this.
- If a name has been changed by Deed Poll or Statutory
Declaration, then these documents should be produced.
- Please Note: PHOTOCOPIES OF ANY DOCUMENTS ARE NOT
ACCEPTABLE
Foreign Nationals
All foreign nationals and their partners wishing to marry in
England and Wales will be required to attend a Designated Register
Office to give their Notice of intention to marry. Persons subject
to immigration control must satisfy qualifying conditions before
being able to marry, these include:
- Entry clearance granted expressly for the purpose of enabling
them to marry in the UK, or
- Written permission of the Secretary of State to marry in the UK
in the form of a Certificate of Approval, or
- Fall within a class specified for this purpose in regulations
made by the Secretary of State, e.g., has settled status, such as
indefinite leave to remain.
British nationals, EEA nationals, Swiss nationals, persons with
a certificate of entitlement of the right of abode,
diplomats/members of visiting armed forces and representatives of
the United Nations and other international organisations are not
subject to immigration control.
If you think you may be affected by these changes, please
contact the Home Office on tel: 0870 606 7766, to ensure you have
the correct documentation to enable your preliminaries to marriage
to be taken.Please ring your local Register Office for information
regarding your nearest Designated Register Office. (N.B. There is
no Designated Register Office within the Vale of Glamorgan).