Texas Marriage License Requirements | Courthouse Wedding Guide

Planning a courthouse wedding or civil ceremony in Texas? This is your complete, verified guide to marriage license requirements — fees, waiting periods, witnesses, age requirements, and everything else you need to know to get legally married in Texas.

Marriage License Requirements in Texas (2025)

Requirement Details
License Fee Varies by county (typically $82; waived/reduced with premarital course)
Waiting Period 72 hours (waived for active military; waived with a recognized premarital education course)
License Validity 90 days
Where to Apply County Clerk's office
Documents Required Valid government-issued photo ID for both parties
Residency Required Not required
Minimum Age (No Consent) 18
Minimum Age (With Parental Consent) Under 18 requires a court order from a judge (Texas tightened its age requirements in recent years)
Witnesses Required Not required
Ceremony Cost (Estimate) Varies by officiant; some justices of the peace perform ceremonies

What You Need to Know About Getting Married in Texas

Texas marriage licenses are valid in other U.S. states — a rare feature. Completing a premarital education course waives the 72-hour waiting period. 90-day validity. No witnesses required. License must be returned within 30 days of ceremony.

Step-by-Step: How to Get Your Texas Marriage License

  1. Gather your documents — Valid government-issued photo ID for both parties. If previously married, bring your divorce decree or death certificate.
  2. Visit County Clerk's office — both parties must appear in person unless stated otherwise.
  3. Pay the fee — Varies by county (typically $82; waived/reduced with premarital course). Call ahead to confirm accepted payment methods (cash, card, money order).
  4. Observe the waiting period — 72 hours (waived for active military; waived with a recognized premarital education course). Plan your application date accordingly.
  5. Use your license within the validity window — 90 days.
  6. Return the signed license — after your ceremony, your officiant (or you, if self-solemnizing) must return the completed license to the issuing office.

Plan Your Texas Courthouse Wedding with CourthouseCloud

CourthouseCloud is built specifically for courthouse weddings and civil ceremonies. From license guidance to ceremony coordination, we make getting legally married simple, elegant, and stress-free. Start planning your Texas courthouse wedding today →

Source: Texas official vital records / court authority. Requirements verified May 2026. Always confirm current requirements directly with your local clerk's office before your visit, as fees and rules are subject to change.