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How to Get a Marriage License in Florida

Florida marriage license at a glance

License fee
$86 ($61 if a FL-approved premarital course is completed)
Waiting period
3 days for FL RESIDENTS (waived by premarital course); none for non-residents
Minimum age
18 without consent
Blood test
no

Confirm the fee before you go. The marriage-license fee in this state is set by the county and varies, so the figure above is a representative range — check the exact, current fee on the issuing county clerk's own fee schedule. This page is informational only and is not legal advice.

In Florida, individuals seeking a marriage license must apply through the County Clerk of the Court in the county where they plan to marry. The standard fee is approximately $86, though this can be reduced to $61 if the applicant completes a state-approved premarital course, which also waives the three-day waiting period for Florida residents. Non-residents are not subject to the waiting period. Applicants must present a government-issued photo ID and provide a Social Security number or a sworn statement if one is unavailable. The license remains valid for 60 days from issuance.

Florida law permits marriage for individuals aged 18 and older without consent. Those aged 17 may marry with notarized parental consent, provided the age difference between the parties does not exceed two years; individuals under 17 are not permitted to marry in the state. No blood tests or witnesses are required. Many counties offer online application options, though the applicant must appear in person to finalize and pick up the license. Because marriage license fees are set at the county level and regulations may change, applicants should confirm the exact current fee and all eligibility requirements with their county clerk's office or the official county or state website before applying.

What a marriage license actually is

A marriage license is the government document that authorizes your marriage; you apply for it before the ceremony, and once it’s signed and returned it becomes your marriage record. The fee, waiting period and ID rules below are what each state and county sets — always confirm the exact current amount with the issuing clerk.

A pair of plain gold wedding rings resting on a clean white surface
Photo: Melinda Pack / Wikimedia Commons (CC0)
RequirementFlorida
License fee$86 ($61 if a FL-approved premarital course is completed)
Fee set byCounty (varies by county)
Waiting period3 days for FL RESIDENTS (waived by premarital course); none for non-residents
License validity60 days
ID requiredgovernment photo ID; SSN (or sworn statement if none)
Residency requiredno
Minimum age18 without consent; 17 with notarized parental consent AND age gap ≤2 yrs; under 17 not permitted
Blood testno
Witnessesno witnesses required
Online optionmany counties offer online application; license picked up/finalized in person
Where to applyCounty Clerk of the Court (county-administered)
Governing lawSet by state statute — refer to your state’s official statutes and the issuing County Clerk for the governing rule

Full Florida requirements → · Fees & waiting → · How to apply → · Look up another state →

Compiled from public-record Florida marriage law and the issuing agency, verified June 2026. Primary source → · How we compile this. Informational only — not legal advice.

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