If you're getting married in Montana, you must first apply for a marriage license.
It'll cost you $53.00, and you'll have to use it within 180 days.
To get married in Montana, you must apply for a Montana marriage license at a clerk of the district court office.
The clerk of the district court and clerk of court are interchangeable titles for the same person and office.
If either of you reside in Montana, apply and marry anywhere in the state. Otherwise, apply in the county where the marriage will occur.
A marriage license costs $53 in Montana.
Filing a declaration of marriage with the district court costs $53.
Some district courts will mail you a certified copy of your marriage certificate for free, while others charge. Ask when applying.
If either of you live in Montana, you can get married in any county. Otherwise, you must marry in the county where you procure the marriage license.
A declaration of marriage is when you file your marriage instead of having it solemnized.
Your marriage begins on the date and time specified in the declaration, not when you file.
A solemnized marriage and declared marriage is legally equivalent. Conditions for applying—age, ID, divorce, etc—are the same.
The declaration must contain your names, ages, residences, parents' birth names and addresses, marriage date, and statement of legal competence to marry.
Either you or a Montana-licensed lawyer may draft the declaration, which must be attested to by two attending witnesses.
The declaration of marriage filing fee is $53: same as a marriage license.
File the declaration of marriage in your county of residence in Montana.
The gender-neutral Montana marriage license application solicits the following under oath:
If you cannot apply for a marriage license in person, your co-applicant or legal rep can act as your proxy.
If you're applying by proxy, complete and sign your half of the application in advance and attach identification.
Only Montana residents or active duty military can apply-by-proxy. Furthermore, only one applicant may apply absentee.
If you're at least 18 years old and mentally competent, you can marry without parental consent.
If you're 16 or 17 years old, you can marry after counseling, parental consent, and court approval.
If you're 15 years old or younger, you cannot lawfully marry in Montana.
If you're underage, your custodial parents or guardian must grant consent to marry.
The consent form must be signed in person the same time you apply.
The court clerk will schedule two counseling sessions, 10 days apart.
Fulfill the counseling and consent conditions before petitioning a district court judge to sign your marriage application.
Your marriage license will be issued immediately. You can marry that same day.
Your marriage license will expire 180 days after issuance.
Bring age-validating ID, such as a driver's license, or state, military, or tribal ID card.
Some court clerks do not accept passports as proof of age.
An original or certified copy of your birth certificate is sufficient ID. If not in English, have it translated and notarized.
You may be asked to present an original or certified copy of your birth certificate, especially if you're below 21 years of age.
You do not have to show your social security card. Knowing your SSN is enough.
In addition to photo ID, sole custodial parents must bring proof of custody. Guardians must bring proof of guardianship rights.
As of October 1, 2007, the female premarital blood test for Rubella immunity can be waived on the application.
You're entitled to submit a medical certificate from a licensed physician confirming your Rubella immunity or exemption.
If you're divorced, most court clerks will ask to see a certified copy of your divorce decree.
There is no waiting period between a finalized divorce and when you may remarry.
If you're a widow or widower, most court clerks will ask to review a certified copy of your prior spouse's death certificate.
You can change your name using a certified copy of your marriage certificate.
Wives can take their husband's last name or hyphenate. Maiden to middle name change is also possible.
Update identity documents in the following order: green card, social security card, driver's license, and passport.
If you'd prefer not to compile name change forms yourself, an online name change application can bundle them for you.
Two witnesses, of no specific age, must be present at your marriage ceremony and sign the marriage license thereafter.
Two witnesses must sign your declaration of marriage in front of the court clerk.
Your marriage may be solemnized by a judge, justice of the peace, tribal judge, or custom of any religious denomination or Indian tribe, nation, or group.
Clergypersons do not have to be registered to perform marriages in Montana.
Self-solemnization is allowed if permitted by your religious or Indian traditions.
After you're married, the marriage certificate must be returned to the issuing district court for recording within 30 days.
You can purchase a certified copy of your marriage certificate for $7 from the district court that issued your marriage license.
Noncertified copies are $5. Certified copies are $7 and are used for legal purposes (e.g., marriage name change, court proceedings).
If you can't attend your marriage ceremony, provide a note to your officiant that identifies who will serve as your proxy.
At least one party to a proxy marriage must be a Montana resident or active duty member of the U.S. Armed Forces.
Only the officiant must be notified of your intention to marry-by-proxy.
Only one party to a proxy marriage may assign a stand-in.
You cannot marry a first cousin in Montana.
You cannot marry an ascendant, descendant, sibling (half or whole blood), aunt, uncle, niece, nephew, or first cousin.
You must be unmarried to remarry. Bigamy exceptions are not made in cases of spousal abandonment or presumption of death.
You can enter into a common-law marriage in Montana if you are at least 18 years old.
You can convert a common-law marriage into a real, legal, registered marriage by filing a declaration of marriage.
A common-law marriage is informal, requiring no registration. A declaration of marriage is legal, requiring registration.