How to Officiate a Wedding in Texas
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 Texas?
Texas is one of the easiest states to officiate a wedding. You perform the wedding ceremony, and if you choose to assist with the marriage paperwork too, it’s a straight-forward process here.
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 — Texas makes this easy. FSM ministers can sign the marriage license here, no registration required.
Statute: Texas Family Code § 2.202 — licensed or ordained Christian ministers or priests, Jewish rabbis, and officers of religious organizations authorized to conduct marriages may solemnize marriages.
Can an FSM Minister Handle the Paperwork?
| Can officiant sign the license? |
Yes |
| Registration required? |
No |
| Marriage license cost |
$11–$100 (varies by county) |
| Waiting period |
72 hours (waivable with premarital course or military) |
| License valid for |
90 days |
| Return deadline |
30 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 and SSN. 72-hour waiting period (waivable with premarital course completion or active military). Valid for 90 days.
Pro tip: The 72-hour waiting period is waived if the couple completes a premarital education course. This also reduces the license fee in many counties. Let the couple know about this option.
Right After the Ceremony
Sign the marriage license — you and the couple. Black pen. Do this immediately after the ceremony — don’t wait.
After the Wedding
Return the signed license to the County Clerk within 30 days. Mail it or drop it off. Set a phone reminder right after the ceremony. This is the most important post-ceremony task.
Texas Tips
- FSM-friendly — “officers of religious organizations authorized to conduct marriages” covers FSM ministers
- No registration, no hoops
- Wide cost range by county ($11–$100) — check your specific county
- 72-hour waiting period waivable with premarital course
- Common-law (informal) marriage is recognized in Texas
- 30-day return deadline is generous — but don’t forget
County-Specific Info
- Bexar County — serving San Antonio, Converse…
- Collin County — serving Plano, Frisco, Mckinney, Allen…
- Comal County — serving New Braunfels, Canyon Lake…
- Dallas County — serving Dallas, Irving, Garland, Grand Prairie…
- Denton County — serving Frisco, Denton, Carrollton, Lewisville…
- Harris County — serving Houston, Pasadena, Baytown, Spring…
- Tarrant County — serving Fort Worth, Arlington, Mansfield, North Richland Hills…
- Travis County — serving Austin, Pflugerville, Leander…
- Williamson County — serving Round Rock, Cedar Park, Georgetown, Leander…
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.