How to Officiate a Wedding in Florida
As a Minister of the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster

The Short Version
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 Florida?
Florida is a popular destination wedding state and a straightforward place to officiate. No registration required, no witnesses needed. There’s a 3-day waiting period for Florida residents, but it’s waived with a premarital course (which also saves money on the license).
You Can Do This
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.
The Ordination Package — $79
- Paper Certificate of Ordination
- Black/Silver Resin Wallet Card
- Two Vinyl Car Decals
- Digital credentials (PDF) delivered same-day
- Free shipping worldwide
Get Ordained →
Preparing for the Ceremony
- Get ordained — Get ordained with the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. Takes a few minutes. The digital credentials come within hours, and the physical package ships in a few days.
- Talk to the couple — What kind of ceremony do they want? Religious? Secular? Funny? Short? This is their day — find out what matters to them.
- Write your script — Include the Declaration of Intent and the Pronouncement. Fill in the rest with whatever feels right — personal stories, readings, vows, humor.
- Practice — Read it out loud at least twice. Time it. Speak slowly — you’ll talk faster on the day.
Ceremony Day
- Bring: Your script (printed), your ordination credentials (just in case), and a black pen
- The ceremony: Walk through your script. Declaration of Intent → Pronouncement → done. Everything else is gravy.
- On the license: Mark the ceremony type as “Religious” even if your ceremony isn’t particularly religious. “Civil” is reserved for government officials. Just a bureaucratic checkbox.
- Relax. You’ve prepared. The couple picked you. Enjoy it.
If You’re Also Handling the Paperwork
Good news — Florida makes this easy. FSM ministers can sign the marriage license here, no registration required.
Statute: Florida Statutes § 741.07 — all regularly ordained ministers of the gospel or elders in communion with some church can solemnize marriages.
Can an FSM Minister Handle the Paperwork?
| Can officiant sign the license? |
Yes |
| Registration required? |
No |
| Marriage license cost |
$86–$93.50 (varies by county; $25 discount with premarital course) |
| Waiting period |
3 days for FL residents (waived with premarital course); none for non-residents |
| License valid for |
60 days |
| Return deadline |
10 days after ceremony |
| Witnesses needed |
None |
Before the Wedding
- Call the local County Clerk — Tell them you’re an ordained minister performing a wedding. Ask what they need from you. They do this every day and they’re almost always helpful.
- The couple gets their marriage license — They apply at their County Clerk’s office. Both parties appear with valid photo ID. Florida residents have a 3-day waiting period (waived with a premarital course). Non-residents have no waiting period. Valid for 60 days.
Pro tip: A premarital education course waives the 3-day waiting period AND knocks $25 off the license fee. Worth mentioning to the couple.
Right After the Ceremony
Sign the marriage license — you and the couple. No witnesses are legally required (though having them is fine). Black pen. Do this immediately after the ceremony — don’t wait.
After the Wedding
Return the signed license to the County Clerk within 10 days. Mail it or drop it off. Set a phone reminder right after the ceremony. This is the most important post-ceremony task.
Florida Tips
- No registration, no witnesses — very simple
- Popular destination wedding state — clerks are experienced with all kinds of officiants
- Premarital course = no waiting period + $25 off the license fee (great deal)
- Non-residents skip the waiting period entirely
- 10-day return deadline — don’t forget
- Notaries public can also officiate in Florida — unique to a handful of states
County-Specific Info
- Brevard County — serving Palm Bay, Melbourne, Titusville, Merritt Island…
- Broward County — serving Fort Lauderdale, Pembroke Pines, Hollywood, Coral Springs…
- Duval County — serving Jacksonville, Jacksonville Beach…
- Hillsborough County — serving Tampa, Brandon, Riverview, Plant City…
- Miami-Dade County — serving Miami, Hialeah, Miami Beach, Homestead…
- Orange County — serving Orlando, Apopka, Ocoee, Winter Garden…
- Palm Beach County — serving West Palm Beach, Boca Raton, Boynton Beach, Delray Beach…
- Pinellas County — serving St. Petersburg, Clearwater, Largo, Palm Harbor…
- Saint Johns County — serving St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra Beach, Nocatee…
Questions?
Contact us. And the #1 rule: talk to your local County Clerk 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 County Clerk.