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District of Columbia Marriage License Requirements

Minimum age
18 without consent
Blood test
no
Witnesses
1 witness (18+); couple may also self-solemnize

In the District of Columbia, applicants must present a government-issued photo ID, proof of age, and a Social Security number or complete a no-SSN affidavit. The minimum age to marry is 18 without parental consent. Individuals aged 16 or 17 may marry with documented parental or guardian consent, while those under 16 are not permitted to marry. No blood test is required, and the District has no residency requirement for applicants.

A marriage license in the District of Columbia requires at least one witness who is 18 years of age or older, though the District allows couples to self-solemnize without an officiant. There is no waiting period between application and license issuance, and licenses do not expire. Applications are processed through a single citywide Marriage Bureau rather than county-level offices. The application fee is $45, and online applications are accepted. Individuals should confirm all eligibility requirements and procedures with the District of Columbia Marriage Bureau or the District's official statutes before applying.

RequirementDistrict of Columbia
License fee$45 (statewide; DC Marriage Bureau, Superior Court)
Fee set byState (statewide)
Waiting periodnone (DC eliminated its 3-day wait)
License validityno expiration (DC license does not expire once issued)
ID requiredgovernment photo ID; proof of age; SSN (or no-SSN affidavit)
Residency requiredno
Minimum age18 without consent; 16-17 with parental/guardian consent; under 16 not permitted
Blood testno
Witnesses1 witness (18+); couple may also self-solemnize
Online optionapply online via the DC Courts marriage portal; self-uniting/self-solemnization allowed
Where to applyDC Marriage Bureau (Superior Court of DC) — single citywide office
Governing lawSet by state statute — refer to your state’s official statutes and the issuing County Clerk for the governing rule

Confirm locally. Requirements come from public-record state law and can change. Verify with the issuing county clerk or state .gov. Informational only — not legal advice.

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Full District of Columbia license guide → · How to apply →

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