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As a Minister of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

There are two things: the wedding ceremony, and the legal marriage. One is a ceremonial ritual, a performance, and the other is paperwork. You’re leading the ceremony. You may also assist the clerk with the marriage paperwork in some places. In Alaska?
Alaska is a straightforward state for officiating. There’s a 3-day waiting period for the marriage license, but no registration is required for ministers. Just be prepared to show your ordination credentials if the local office asks.
The couple asked you because they want you standing up there — not a stranger, not a professional, you. That means something. Here’s what you need to know:
It’s not as scary as you think. Most ceremonies are 5–15 minutes. The couple does most of the talking (vows, “I do”). You’re the guide.
At a minimum, your ceremony needs two elements: 1. Declaration of Intent — “Do you take this person…” / “I do” 2. Pronouncement — You declare them married
Everything else — readings, vows, stories, jokes, Pastafarian blessings, the whole production — is optional and up to you and the couple.
Good news — Alaska doesn’t require minister registration. FSM ministers can sign the marriage license here without jumping through extra hoops.
Statute: Alaska Statutes § 25.05.261 — ministers, priests, rabbis of any church or congregation can solemnize marriages.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Can officiant sign the license? | Yes |
| Registration required? | No |
| Marriage license cost | ~$60 |
| Waiting period | 3 days |
| License valid for | 90 days |
| Return deadline | 7 days after ceremony |
| Witnesses needed | 2 adults |
Sign the marriage license — you, the couple, and 2 witnesses. Black pen. Do this immediately after the ceremony — don’t wait.
Return the signed license to the Bureau of Vital Statistics within 7 days. Mail it or drop it off. Set a phone reminder right after the ceremony. This is the most important post-ceremony task.
Contact us. And the #1 rule: talk to your local Bureau of Vital Statistics before the ceremony. They do this every day. They’ll tell you exactly what you need.
This page is a helpful guide, not legal advice. Laws change. Always verify current requirements with your local Bureau of Vital Statistics.