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North Carolina Marriage License Requirements

Minimum age
18 without consent
Blood test
no
Witnesses
2 witnesses (18+) sign the license

In North Carolina, a couple seeking a marriage license must present a government-issued photo ID, a certified birth certificate, and a Social Security number or a signed affidavit if a Social Security number is unavailable. No residency requirement applies. The application requires two witnesses, both at least 18 years old, who will sign the license. A blood test is not required. The standard marriage license fee is sixty dollars, payable to the issuing county clerk.

Age eligibility follows a tiered structure. Individuals aged 18 and older may marry without additional approval. Those aged 16 or 17 may marry with documented parental consent or a court order. Persons aged 14 or 15 may marry only with a court order and must demonstrate pregnancy or the existence of a child. Marriage is not permitted for anyone under age 14. Because eligibility rules, documentation requirements, and procedural details may vary by county or change, applicants should contact their county clerk's office or consult North Carolina's official state statutes to confirm current requirements before applying.

RequirementNorth Carolina
License fee$60 (statewide statutory fee; Register of Deeds)
Fee set byState (statewide)
Waiting periodnone
License validity60 days
ID requiredgovernment photo ID; certified birth certificate; SSN (or no-SSN affidavit)
Residency requiredno
Minimum age18 without consent; 16-17 with parental consent or court order; 14-15 only with a court order (and pregnancy/child); under 14 not permitted
Blood testno
Witnesses2 witnesses (18+) sign the license
Online optionsome counties offer online application; finalized at the Register of Deeds
Where to applyRegister of Deeds (county-administered; statewide $60 fee)
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 North Carolina license guide → · How to apply →

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