Getting married

This advice applies to Scotland. See advice for See advice for England, See advice for Northern Ireland, See advice for Wales

Who can get married

Opposite-sex and same-sex couples can get married in Scotland if they are both at least 16 years old.

You can't marry in Scotland if you are:

  • already married or in a civil partnership - except if you are converting your civil partnership to a marriage. You and your partner must both be single, widowed, divorced or have dissolved a previous civil partnership

  • under 16 years old

  • close relatives

  • incapable of understanding the nature of a marriage ceremony and of consenting to marriage.

Transgender people

A transgender person is considered to be of the sex they were given at birth unless they have a gender recognition certificate (GRC). A GRC shows that the transgender person has legal recognition that they have a different gender identity from the one they were given at birth.

A married person can change their gender without having to end their marriage.

The spouse of a transgender person has the right to a divorce in Scottish law.

Young people

In Scotland, if you're aged between 16 and 18, you do not need parental consent to get married.

If you or your partner is 16 or 17 years old and either of you lives in England or Wales, you can get married in Scotland. However, this marriage will not be legally recognised in England and Wales.

Relatives who can't marry

It is against the law in Scotland to marry or have a civil partnership with the following relatives:

  • parent

  • child

  • adoptive parent or former adoptive parent

  • adoptive child or former adoptive child

  • grandparent

  • grandchild

  • sibling

  • aunt or uncle

  • niece or nephew

  • great-grandparent

  • great-grandchild.

There are some relatives by affinity who you can marry in Scotland. These are:

  • child of former wife or husband

  • child of former civil partner

  • former spouse or civil partner of parent

  • former spouse or civil partner of grandparent

  • grandchild of former spouse or former civil partner.

To do this, you must:

  • be 21 or over

  • not have lived in the same house as the person when you were 18 or younger

  • not have been treated as a child of their family.

Incest laws vary from one country to another and it is possible that a couple living in Scotland may be guilty of incest in this country but not their own. If you are already validly married and living in Scotland, it is unlikely you would be prosecuted. However, if you are living together you would not be allowed to marry in Scotland and might also be liable for prosecution.

For more information about who can legally marry in Scotland, you should consult an experienced adviser, for example at a Citizens Advice Bureau - where to get advice.

Getting engaged

Engagements are mainly for cultural reasons and have limited legal status. However, they can sometimes be used, for example in immigration law, as evidence of intention to marry.

If you or your partner decides to end an engagement, the agreement to marry cannot be legally enforced. In these circumstances, it is not legally clear what should happen about engagement rings. The ring should be returned if the giver made clear that in the event of a broken engagement it should be returned. Gifts should be returned if they were given on condition of marriage. This, however, cannot be legally enforced.

Prenuptial agreements

A prenuptial agreement is a formal written agreement made by a couple before they get married. It sets out the wishes of both partners about how any assets owned before the marriage will be divided if the marriage ends. It may also say what should happen to anything that is acquired during the marriage.

In Scotland, prenuptial agreements are generally thought to be legally enforceable by the Scottish courts, although they do need to be drawn up carefully. You will need help from a legal adviser before entering into a prenuptial agreement.

If you don't draw up a prenuptial agreement and then you separate from your partner, you can make a separation agreement. This sets out how you have agreed to divide up anything that you own.

How to marry

An opposite-sex couple can marry by:

  • a civil ceremony

  • a religious or belief ceremony

  • converting their existing civil partnership to marriage.

A same-sex couple can marry by:

  • a civil ceremony

  • a religious or belief ceremony - if the religious or belief body has agreed to carry out same-sex marriages

  • converting their existing civil partnership to marriage.

Converting a civil partnership to marriage

It is possible for a couple to convert a qualifying civil partnership to marriage.

A civil partnership will qualify for conversion to a marriage if it was registered in Scotland and hasn't been dissolved, annulled or ended by death. This can be done through a simple administrative process or by having a full marriage ceremony.

A civil partnership that was registered at a British consulate overseas or by British armed forces personnel may also qualify for conversion if you elected Scotland as the relevant part of the UK when you entered into the civil partnership and its details were sent to the Registrar General of Scotland. This can be done through a simple administrative process or by having a full marriage ceremony.

A civil partnership that was registered outside Scotland will qualify for conversion to a marriage if it hasn't been dissolved, annulled or ended by death. To change a civil partnership registered outside Scotland into a marriage, couples need to go through a marriage ceremony. Your marriage will be recognised in Scotland.

If you want to convert your civil partnership to marriage through the administrative process, you will need to make an appointment with your local registry office and take along a copy of your civil partnership certificate and photo ID. You will be required to complete an application form. The district registrar will witness your signing of the form. The information will then be entered into the marriage register. There will be a charge of £10 if you want a copy of the marriage certificate.

If you want to convert your civil partnership to marriage by having a full marriage ceremony, you will have to give the usual notice and pay the fees associated with registering a marriage.

When you convert a civil partnership to marriage, the civil partnership will end (for the purposes of the law of Scotland) on the conversion. You will be treated as having been married to each other since the date your civil partnership was registered or from 5 December 2005, whichever is later.

Find out more about changing a civil partnership to a marriage on mygov.scot.

Whether a marriage is to be by a civil or a religious/belief ceremony, the following legal requirements must be met:

  • both you and your partner must complete a marriage notice - STEP 2

  • the marriage must be conducted by either a registrar or an approved celebrant in the presence of two witnesses aged 16 or over

  • at the end of the ceremony, you and your partner, the two witnesses and the person who conducted the ceremony must all sign the marriage schedule.

The steps involved in organising a marriage ceremony are generally as follows but STEP 1 and STEP 2 may be equally important as deciding on a venue may give you an exact date.

Step 1 - Finding your venue

A religious or belief ceremony can be held anywhere agreed by the couple and the approved celebrant.

A civil marriage can take place in a registration office or any other appropriate place (other than religious premises) agreed by the couple and the local registration authority.

Step 2 - Marriage notices

You and your partner will each need to give notice to the district registrar for the area where you intend to marry. This applies to a religious/belief or civil marriage.

The notices must be given to the district registrar no earlier than 3 months and no later than 29 days before the date of the marriage.

Step 3 - Marriage Notice Book

The registrar must make details of your intention to marry available to the public for 29 days before you can get married.

Step 4 - Getting the marriage schedule

In a civil ceremony the district registrar will keep the schedule until marriage. In a religious or belief ceremony, either you or your partner must collect it in person from the registration office because it acts as a licence for the celebrant to marry you.

The marriage schedule is issued no earlier than 7 days before the date of the marriage.

Step 5 - Your wedding day

Civil marriages are conducted by district registrars appointed by the registrar general. Religious or belief ceremonies must be conducted by an approved celebrant.

The marriage must be performed in front of the registrar or celebrant and two witnesses.

Finding a venue

A civil marriage ceremony can take place in a registration office or any other appropriate location (other than religious premises) that has been agreed by the couple and the registration authority, for example a stately home, a boat in Scottish waters or a hillside.

A religious or belief ceremony includes religious beliefs and other belief systems such as humanism. A religious or belief ceremony can be held anywhere (for example on a boat or hillside) as long as the couple can find an approved celebrant. This is someone who is authorised to perform marriages.

You can obtain a list of approved celebrants in your area from the district registrar.

Both religious and civil marriages must take place at the time and place specified on the marriage schedule. If the place of marriage is changed, the district registrar must be informed and may make changes to the marriage schedule.

Residence requirements

There are no residence requirements for someone wishing to marry in Scotland, therefore citizens of any country can marry in any district they choose, provided there is no legal impediment to the marriage (that is, it must not break the law).

District registrars must be notified and sent the relevant forms and documents. The marriage notice, which must be completed by you and your partner, can be sent abroad and returned by post. You do not need to be resident in Scotland during the waiting period between the giving of notice and the date on which the marriage can take place. However, if you are having a religious or belief ceremony, either you or your partner must collect the marriage schedule in person before the ceremony. Addresses of district registrars can be obtained from any district registrar or the registrar general.

Marriage notices

The first legal step to getting married (except if you are converting a civil partnership to a marriage through the administrative process) is to give notice to the district registrar in the area where you intend to marry. Each person has to complete a marriage notice on a form provided by the registrar. This applies to a religious/belief or civil marriage. Find the marriage notice form and guidance on the National Records of Scotland website.

Money and certificates

Each marriage notice should be accompanied by:

  • a fee

  • birth certificates or adoption certificates 

  • a civil partnership certificate if you're converting a civil partnership to marriage by a marriage ceremony

  • a divorce certificate if either you or your partner was previously married

  • a death certificate if a previous partner has died

  • a certificate that you are free to marry under the law of your own country if not normally domiciled in the UK.

The district registrar may require evidence of the nationality of the couple intending to marry.

If any of these documents is in a foreign language, it must be accompanied by a certified English translation that gives the registrar enough information.

You should normally provide a full birth certificate, but you can use an abbreviated birth certificate. The registrar might ask for a full birth certificate if:

  • you were born outside of Scotland and there are concerns that the parentage details provided are incorrect

  • an error is made regarding the spelling of parents’ names, to allow the registrar to see how the names were recorded at birth.

If you’re adopted, you can use your adoption certificate.

Problems with the certificates required

If you cannot provide any of these documents, the registrar may accept other documentary evidence. If the name on your birth certificate differs from the name you normally use, you should complete the marriage notice form in the name that you are using now. The registrar will decide whether both your names need to be recorded.

What happens next

The registrar enters the names of you and your partner and the proposed marriage date into the marriage notice book and onto a list of intended marriages. This is displayed either inside or outside the office. Anyone can inspect this list up to the date of the wedding and if someone suspects that there is an impediment to the marriage, they can inspect the marriage notice book.

An objection can be announced anytime before you and your partner are pronounced married. It should be submitted in writing to the district registrar and will be considered by the registrar general. If the objection is, for example, a simple inaccuracy in the marriage notice, you will be notified and changes made. If the objection concerns the law being broken, the marriage process will be stopped while a full investigation takes place.

Special immigration rules

If you're travelling to the UK from abroad to get married, you may need a visa or a permit. This will depend on where you're from, who you're marrying, and whether you intend to stay in the UK afterwards. You can read more about coming to the UK to get married on the UK government website.

People who are subject to immigration control and wish to marry in Scotland in a registration office must give notice in person or by post at a registration office. Everyone wishing to marry in a registration office may be asked to provide proof of their nationality.

You're subject to immigration control unless you:

  • are a British citizen or someone with the right of abode in the UK

  • are an EEA or Swiss national with settled status - the EEA includes all EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway

  • have no conditions attached to your stay in the UK, for example because you're a diplomat or a member of visiting armed forces.

If the registrar believes that you are entering or have entered a marriage for immigration purposes, they have a duty to report this to UK Visas and Immigration. The registrar must provide information including your marital status and your nationality.

If someone wishing to marry in Scotland is subject to immigration control, special rules may apply when giving notice. If so, you should consult an experienced adviser, for example at a Citizens Advice Bureau - where to get advice.

Getting the marriage schedule

After 29 days but no earlier than 7 days before the date of the marriage, the registrar can issue you and your partner with a marriage schedule. This is the initial record of the marriage. In a civil ceremony, the district register will keep the schedule until the marriage. In a religious ceremony, either you or your partner must collect it in person from the registration office because it acts as a licence for the celebrant to marry you.

If 29 days' notice has not been given, the Registrar General can only authorise a marriage to take place in exceptional circumstances.

If either you or your partner lives in England or Wales, see Marrying in Scotland if you are not living in Scotland.

Changes to the marriage schedule

If the marriage cannot take place on the date or at the place specified on the marriage schedule, the registrar must be informed of this. They will then either issue a new schedule or authorise the celebrant to make changes to the old one.

If the new date is more than 3 months after the date originally specified, the registrar general will either direct the registrar to issue a new schedule or require you to submit new marriage notices and start the procedure again.

Civil marriage ceremonies

Civil marriages are conducted by district registrars, appointed by the registrar general. The registrar will conduct the marriage in their district registration or any other appropriate place.

You and your partner must provide two witnesses aged 16 or over who will be present at the ceremony and sign the marriage schedule.

The registrar will make a short statement about marriage; they should be asked beforehand to indicate what form of words they will use. You and your partner must say the statutory vows. You may wish to personalise your marriage ceremony by including readings, poetry, music or your own personal vows in addition to the statutory vows. It is not necessary to have a ring.

If either or both of you cannot speak English, you must arrange for an interpreter to be present and are responsible for paying for their services.

At the end of the ceremony the registrar, you, your partner and the witnesses must all sign the marriage schedule.

Religious or belief marriage ceremonies

Opposite-sex couples can marry in a religious or belief ceremony conducted by an approved celebrant. That celebrant may be from a religion such as Christianity or Hinduism or from another belief system such as humanism.

Same-sex couples can have a religious or belief marriage ceremony if the religious or belief body has agreed to conduct same-sex marriages and is authorised to do so. There is no legal obligation or duty on a religious or belief body to conduct same-sex marriages. It is not unlawful discrimination for an individual celebrant or a religious or belief body to refuse to conduct a same-sex marriage.

You should be able to obtain a list of approved celebrants in the area where you wish to marry from any district registrar.

It is possible for people over the age of 21 to apply to the registrar general for temporary authorisation to act as a religious or belief celebrant if they are affiliated to a religious or belief body and are supported by the office bearers of that body to carry out marriage ceremonies on its behalf. This means, for example, that you could be married by a member of your family or a friend as long as that person meets the necessary requirements about religious or belief affiliation. There is more information about applying for temporary authorisation on the National Records of Scotland website.

Religious or belief marriages can be conducted anywhere by the religious or belief body concerned; they are not restricted to religious buildings.

For a religious or belief ceremony:

  • you or your partner must collect the marriage schedule in person from the district registrar and give it to the celebrant before the ceremony

  • there must be two witnesses aged 16 years or over

  • the ceremony must follow the form recognised by the religious or belief body concerned

  • at the end of the ceremony, the celebrant, you, your partner and the witnesses must all sign the marriage schedule.

If you are getting married using a religious ceremony in England or Wales, there are different churches and procedures.

Humanism

Humanist celebrants are legally approved celebrants and can carry out marriage ceremonies. The Humanist Society represents its members, who do not believe in any religion but believe in taking responsibility for their actions and base their ethics on the goals of human welfare, happiness and fulfilment. Find out more about humanist ceremonies on the Humanist Society Scotland website.

Registration of marriages

In the case of a religious or belief marriage, you must ensure that the signed schedule reaches the district registrar within 3 days of marriage. In a civil marriage, the registrar keeps the schedule after it has been completed at the end of the ceremony. Details are registered in the Register of Marriages and sent to the registrar general, who keeps it in the National Records of Scotland. You can either pay for a copy of the marriage certificate at the ceremony or at a later date.

Marrying in Scotland if you're not living in Scotland

If a person living in England or Wales intends to get married in Scotland to either a person resident in Scotland or a person resident in England and Wales who has a parent resident in Scotland, they may be able to give notice of marriage to the superintendent registrar in the district of England and Wales in which they reside. However, the person they are marrying should give notice in Scotland in the usual way.

If you or your partner lives outside the UK (that is, you have not been resident for 2 years before submitting the marriage notice), you must submit with the marriage notice a certificate from your country stating that there is no known legal impediment to the marriage. If this is not possible, the registrar general may offer an acceptable alternative. If not in English, such documents need a certified English translation.

Marrying outside Scotland

If you are resident in Scotland and want to marry elsewhere in the UK, you might need to get a certificate of no impediment from a Scottish registrar. This is to show that there is no obstacle that would prevent you from getting married. 

If you want to marry outside the UK, you will have to comply with the requirements of the particular country. You can get information about this from an embassy or official representative of the country in the UK. Find out more about getting married abroad on the National Records of Scotland website.

If you want to know if your marriage outside the UK will be recognised in the UK, you should speak to a solicitor. Check our advice about using a solicitor

Marriage by proxy

A marriage by proxy is when either you or your partner, or both of you, are not physically present at the ceremony. It may be extremely difficult to prove that a marriage by proxy is a valid marriage, both legally and for claiming benefits.

Courts have made different rulings on the validity of proxy marriages. The central question is whether or not a proxy marriage is recognised as valid in the country where it took place and in the countries where you and your partner were domiciled at the time. If you entered a proxy marriage before you were domiciled in the UK, you will need an expert opinion about whether the marriage is recognised in the country where it took place and so whether it is valid in the UK.

The concept of ‘domicile’ is very complex and does not necessarily mean living in a country. For more information you should consult an experienced adviser, for example at a Citizens Advice Bureau - where to get advice.

Polygamous marriages

A polygamous marriage is when a man or woman is entitled to marry more than one wife or husband. A polygamous marriage which takes place in the UK is not valid. Marriages in other countries where polygamy is allowed may be recognised as valid in Britain, provided that none of the spouses was domiciled in the UK at the time of the marriage.

The concept of 'domicile' is very complex and does not necessarily mean living in a country. For more information you should consult an experienced adviser, for example at a Citizens Advice Bureau - where to get advice.

Marriages which are not recognised as valid

Certain marriages are treated as if they never took place. These are called void marriages. They are marriages which do not meet the requirements of UK law. An example of a void marriage is one where the partners may not marry because they are related. If you need to know whether your marriage is void, you will need to seek specialist legal advice.

Some marriages may have met the requirements of UK law when they took place but may then be annulled. These are called voidable marriages. An example of where a marriage is voidable is where one of the partners did not give valid consent to the marriage because the consent was given under duress. Either partner can seek to annul the marriage but if neither partner does, the marriage will be valid. If you need to know more about voidable marriages, you will need to seek specialist advice.

Making a marriage legally valid

If you have been married in a way that isn't recognised as valid under UK law, you can get married again by a civil ceremony. This will make the marriage valid in the UK and make any children fully legitimate under the law. It will ensure that claims for contributory benefits are met in full and that you can get tax allowances and concessions available to married couples. You should advise the registrar of the full facts regarding the previous marriage, and the registrar will be able to assist in completing the marriage notice.

Bigamy

If you marry or enter a civil partnership in the UK when you are already legally married or in a civil partnership, the marriage is bigamous and will be void. Bigamy is a statutory offence, punishable by imprisonment, a fine or both.

Remarriage

There are no legal restrictions to prevent people from remarrying. Anyone who is divorced or whose spouse has died can marry again in a civil ceremony.

Religions have different rules about whether you can remarry in a religious ceremony. If you have been married before and want to marry again using a religious ceremony, you will need to check with an official of the relevant religion.

Irregular marriages

The term 'common-law husband or wife' is often used but has no legal standing. It is a common misunderstanding that a couple will have established a 'common-law marriage' after living together for a period of time. There was a type of irregular marriage called 'marriage by cohabitation with habit and repute' which could apply to couples who had lived together and were thought to be married. In practice, this was rarely used, and except for very particular circumstances was abolished by the Family Law (Scotland) Act 2006. Only irregular marriages established before 4 May 2006 will be recognised.

Proof of irregular marriage

To prove that you are married by cohabitation with habit and repute, you must bring an action of Declarator of Marriage in the Court of Session. Details of the decree are passed on to the registrar general, who will register the marriage. You will need a solicitor.

The action for Declarator of Marriage can be brought to court by either you or your partner, your children or any person with an interest in proving that the marriage exists, for example to prove the grounds for actions of aliment or to show inheritance rights. It is possible to bring this action after either or both parties are dead.

Proof of irregular marriage for social security purposes

If you are claiming social security benefits which require you to be married, or to have been married (for example to claim bereavement benefits), there is a special procedure which you can use to establish that you are, or have been, married by cohabitation with habit and repute.

You should inform the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) that you are, or have been, married by cohabitation with habit and repute when you make a claim for the benefit.

An acceptance by the DWP for social security purposes will not entitle you to claim that you are, or have been, married for any other purposes. If you need to establish that you are, or have been, married for any other purpose, you will have to take an action for declarator of marriage, as described above.

Forced marriages

Forcing someone to marry without their full and free consent is against the law in Scotland and an abuse of their human rights. If you are afraid that you may be forced into a marriage in this country, or that someone in this country may be planning to force you into a marriage while you are abroad, you should contact the police. This is also the case if you are worried that someone you know is about to be forced into a marriage. Forced marriage is a criminal offence, punishable by up to 7 years in prison and/or a fine.

You can also apply to court for a forced marriage protection order, which can stop a wide range of behaviour, for example:

  • taking you abroad for marriage

  • taking your passport away

  • intimidating you with threats and violence.

It can also require someone to reveal where you are. Anyone who breaks a forced marriage protection order can be sent to prison for up to 2 years and receive a fine of up to £10,000.

If you are the victim of a forced marriage or if you are worried about someone who is at risk of being forced into a marriage, as well as contacting the police, you could also contact Scotland's Domestic Abuse and Forced Marriage Helpline. This is a free, confidential helpline available 24 hours a day and staffed by trained advisers. There is information about forced marriage on the website and this is available in different languages.

Scotland's Domestic Abuse and Forced Marriage Helpline

Tel: 0800 027 1234

Email: helpline@sdafmh.org.uk

Website: sdafmh.org.uk

If you're afraid that you may be forced into marriage abroad, you should contact the Forced Marriages Unit for advice before travelling.

Forced Marriage Unit

Foreign and Commonwealth Office

King Charles Street

London

SW1A 2AH

Tel: 020 7008 0151 (Monday to Friday from 9.00am to 5.00pm)

Out of hours tel: 020 7008 1500 (ask for the Global Response Centre)

Email: fmuoutreach@fco.gov.uk

Website: https://www.gov.uk/stop-forced-marriage

Registrar general

The address of the registrar general is:

National Records of Scotland

Change of Name Unit

New Register House

Edinburgh

EH1 3YT

Tel: 0131 314 4273

Order Service: 0131 314 4411

Email: namechange@nrscotland.gov.uk

Website: www.nrscotland.gov.uk

Staff at the National Records of Scotland can give addresses of district registrars and provide further information about all aspects of getting married. A directory of registrars in Scotland is available on the National Records of Scotland website.

Local registration offices can be found in the phone book under registration of births, deaths and marriages and can provide addresses of other district registrars, lists of approved celebrants, marriage notices and information on all aspects of getting married.