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How to Get a Marriage License in Kansas

Kansas marriage license at a glance

License fee
$85.50 (statewide statutory fee; District Court Clerk)
Waiting period
3 days (waivable by a judge for cause)
Minimum age
18 without consent
Blood test
no

Confirm the fee before you go. check the exact, current fee on the issuing county clerk's own fee schedule. This page is informational only and is not legal advice.

This row is flagged for re-verification on publish (county-set fee and/or a statute section still being pinned).

In Kansas, couples seeking to marry must obtain a marriage license from the District Court Clerk in their county. The statewide statutory fee is $85.50, though applicants should confirm the exact current fee with their local District Court Clerk before applying, as fees and procedures may change. Applicants must present a government-issued photo ID and proof of age. Kansas law permits marriage for individuals age 18 and older without parental consent. Those aged 16 or 17 may marry with the written consent of both parents or approval from a judge. Individuals under 16 are not permitted to marry in the state.

Once an application is submitted, Kansas imposes a three-day waiting period before the license is issued; however, a judge may waive this period for good cause. The license remains valid for six months from the date of issuance. No blood test or witnesses are required. Because marriage laws and fees are subject to change, applicants are strongly encouraged to verify the current requirements, fees, and procedures on their county's District Court Clerk website or the official Kansas state government website before submitting an application.

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)
RequirementKansas
License fee$85.50 (statewide statutory fee; District Court Clerk)
Fee set byState (statewide)
Waiting period3 days (waivable by a judge for cause)
License validity6 months
ID requiredgovernment photo ID; proof of age
Residency requiredno
Minimum age18 without consent; 16-17 with consent of both parents OR a judge; under 16 not permitted
Blood testno
Witnessesno witnesses required (officiant signs)
Online optionno statewide online option; apply at the District Court Clerk
Where to applyDistrict Court Clerk (statewide fee)
Governing lawSet by state statute — refer to your state’s official statutes and the issuing County Clerk for the governing rule

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

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

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