Home / Become an Officiant / Delaware
How to Officiate a Wedding in Delaware
Performing weddings in Delaware is more accessible than you might think. Here's exactly how to get authorized — then list your services and start getting booked.
⚠️ Delaware requires officiant registration
Officiants generally must be registered/recognized in Delaware; confirm with the Clerk of the Peace.
Step-by-step
- Get ordained or otherwise authorized to solemnize marriages. Many officiants become ordained online through a recognized organization (e.g., Universal Life Church or American Marriage Ministries); others qualify as clergy, a judge, a justice of the peace, or — where allowed — a notary.
- Check your state and county rules below — confirm whether you must register or file your credentials before performing a ceremony.
- If registration is required, complete it with the office indicated (do this well before the wedding date). In Delaware, this is required (see above) — apply at the Clerk of the Peace.
- Obtain the couple's marriage-license details and confirm the license is valid for your ceremony date and location.
- Perform the ceremony and sign the marriage license; make sure any required witnesses sign as well. Delaware requires 2 witness(es) at the ceremony.
- Return the signed license to the issuing office by the deadline — this is the step that legally records the marriage.
Find your Delaware clerk / registration office →
Ready to start getting booked in Delaware?
List your services on Book a Ceremony — free to join, no lead fees, transparent payouts, and couples come to you.
Join as an Officiant →General information, not legal advice — confirm current requirements with your county/state office. Last reviewed: June 2026. Delaware marriage-license guide · all states