Skip to main content
Getting Married in Spain: UK Legal Guide

Getting Married in Spain: UK Legal Guide

Civil and religious ceremonies, required documents, apostille rules, and post-wedding admin. Everything British citizens need to marry legally in Spain.

Last updated: February 2026

M

MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published January 2026 · Updated February 2026 · 8 min read

Why Get Married in Spain?

Spain is one of the most popular wedding destinations for British couples, and for good reason. Guaranteed sunshine, stunning venues from beachfront villas to hilltop castles, excellent food and wine, and costs that can be significantly lower than equivalent UK weddings. Whether you're a UK resident planning a destination wedding or a Costa del Sol property owner wanting to marry in your adopted home, this guide covers the legal requirements you must satisfy.

The key thing to understand upfront: a legally valid marriage in Spain requires more paperwork than in the UK. Spain's civil registration system demands specific documents, official translations, and apostilles. Starting early (at least 3-6 months before your planned date) is essential.

Civil vs Religious Ceremony

Civil Ceremony (Boda Civil)

  • Performed by: a judge, magistrate, mayor, or authorised council official
  • Where: traditionally at the ayuntamiento (town hall), but many municipalities now authorise ceremonies at external venues — beaches, gardens, hotels, and private villas
  • Language: the legal ceremony is conducted in Spanish. You can have an interpreter present
  • Cost: the legal ceremony itself costs 50 - 150 EUR at the town hall. Off-site ceremonies with a council-authorised officiant typically cost 300 - 800 EUR
  • Legal validity: fully recognised in the UK without any additional steps

Religious Ceremony

  • Catholic: recognised as legally valid in Spain under the concordat between Spain and the Vatican. Requires additional Church paperwork including baptism certificates and marriage preparation course
  • Church of England / Anglican: Anglican churches in Spain (under the Diocese of Europe) can perform marriages, but these may not be automatically recognised as legally valid under Spanish law. You may need a separate civil ceremony
  • Other faiths: certain religions have agreements with the Spanish state (Islam, Judaism, evangelical Christianity). Others may perform a religious ceremony, but you'll need a civil marriage for legal validity

Many British couples opt for a simple civil ceremony for the legalities and then a separate symbolic (non-legal) ceremony at their chosen venue, conducted in English by a celebrant. This gives you complete flexibility over the ceremony content, location, and language.

Required Documents for British Citizens

The exact requirements vary slightly between municipalities, so always confirm with your local Registro Civil (civil registry). However, the standard documents are:

1. Certificate of No Impediment (CNI) / Certificado de No Impedimento

This confirms you are legally free to marry. For British citizens:

  • Apply at the British Consulate in Spain (Malaga or Madrid) or through the UK General Register Office
  • The CNI is valid for 3 months from the date of issue
  • It must be apostilled by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) — this certifies the document for use abroad
  • It must then be officially translated into Spanish by a sworn translator (traductor jurado)

2. Full Birth Certificate

  • Not the short form — you need the full certificate showing parents' names
  • Must be apostilled by the FCDO
  • Must be officially translated into Spanish

3. Passport

  • Valid passport plus photocopies

4. Proof of Address in Spain

  • Empadronamiento (padron certificate) from your local ayuntamiento, or proof of where you are staying in Spain

5. NIE (Numero de Identidad de Extranjero)

  • Your Spanish tax identification number. If you own property, you'll already have one. Otherwise, apply for an NIE before starting the marriage process

6. Divorce Decree or Death Certificate (if previously married)

  • If either party has been previously married, you need the final divorce decree (decreto absoluto) or the death certificate of the former spouse
  • Must be apostilled and officially translated

7. Consular Declaration

  • Some Registro Civil offices require a declaration from the British Consulate confirming your marital status and ability to marry

The Apostille and Translation Process

The apostille and translation requirements catch many couples off guard. Here's the step-by-step:

  1. Obtain original documents — birth certificate (order from the General Register Office), CNI (from the Consulate)
  2. Get the apostille — send documents to the FCDO Legalisation Office (online application at gov.uk). Takes approximately 2-4 weeks. Cost: approximately 30 GBP per document
  3. Official translation — once apostilled, have each document translated by a traductor jurado (sworn translator) registered with the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Cost: 50 - 100 EUR per document
  4. Submit to Registro Civil — present all apostilled and translated documents to the Registro Civil in the municipality where you plan to marry

The Registro Civil will review your documents and, if satisfied, publish the marriage banns (edictos). After the publication period (typically 15 days), you receive the autorisation to marry (expediente matrimonial).

Planning your move to Spain?

Weekly intel on costs, visas, and the best areas for UK buyers. 100% free.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Total paperwork timeline: allow 2-4 months from starting the process to receiving your marriage authorisation.

Where to Get Married on the Costa del Sol

Town Halls (Ayuntamientos)

The most straightforward option. Popular town halls for weddings include:

  • Marbella — the historic Casa Consistorial or the beautiful gardens of the Cortijo de Miraflores
  • Mijas Pueblo — a picturesque hilltop town hall with stunning coastal views
  • Ronda — one of Spain's most dramatic settings
  • Benalmadena Pueblo — charming white village with the famous three-cultures square

Beach Ceremonies

Several Costa del Sol municipalities now authorise civil ceremonies on the beach. Estepona, Marbella, and Benalmadena have designated beach wedding areas. You'll still need the legal civil ceremony (conducted on the beach by an authorised officiant), or you can combine a town hall legal ceremony with a symbolic beach ceremony.

Villas, Hotels, and Fincas

The most popular option for destination weddings. Hundreds of venues along the coast cater to weddings:

  • Luxury hotels: Puente Romano (Marbella), Finca Cortesin (Casares), Kempinski (Estepona), Marbella Club
  • Country estates (fincas): Finca La Concepcion, Cortijo Sabila, Hacienda San Jose — rustic Andalusian charm with modern facilities
  • Private villas: rent a villa with a pool and garden for an intimate celebration
  • Castles and historic buildings: Castillo de la Duquesa, Castillo de Colomares

For the ceremony to be legally valid at a private venue, you need the municipality's authorisation for the officiant to perform the ceremony off-site. Some couples prefer a quick legal ceremony at the town hall followed by a celebrant-led ceremony at their chosen venue — this avoids the bureaucratic complications of off-site civil ceremonies.

Cost Comparison: Spain vs UK

ItemUK AverageCosta del Sol Average
Venue hire5,000 - 10,000 GBP2,000 - 7,000 EUR
Catering (per head)80 - 150 GBP60 - 120 EUR
Photography1,500 - 3,000 GBP1,000 - 2,500 EUR
Flowers800 - 2,000 GBP500 - 1,500 EUR
Music / DJ500 - 1,500 GBP300 - 1,000 EUR
Wedding planner1,500 - 3,000 GBP1,000 - 3,000 EUR
Total (80 guests)20,000 - 40,000 GBP10,000 - 25,000 EUR

Spanish weddings can offer significant savings, particularly on venue hire, catering, and wine (excellent local wine at a fraction of UK prices). However, factor in guest travel and accommodation costs if most guests are flying from the UK.

Post-Wedding Administration

After the ceremony, several administrative steps are needed:

Registering the Marriage in Spain

Your marriage is registered at the Registro Civil where the ceremony took place. You'll receive a Libro de Familia (family book) — a booklet that serves as the official record of your family unit in Spain. You'll also be able to request a certificado de matrimonio (marriage certificate) from the Registro Civil.

Registering the Marriage in the UK

A legal marriage in Spain is automatically recognised in the UK under private international law — you do not need to re-register it. However, you may want to:

  • Obtain an apostilled Spanish marriage certificate — useful for UK administrative purposes (changing names, updating passports, etc.)
  • Update your passport — if changing your name, apply at gov.uk with your Spanish marriage certificate (apostilled and translated)
  • Notify HMRC — your marriage may affect your tax status, especially if one spouse remains UK tax resident
  • Update your will — in England and Wales, marriage automatically revokes a previous will. Make a new will promptly. If you own Spanish property, update your Spanish will too

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Starting too late — the document process takes 2-4 months minimum. Some popular venues and town halls book 12+ months ahead
  • Wrong apostille — the apostille must be from the FCDO (not a solicitor's certification or notarial stamp). It's a specific multilingual certificate under the Hague Convention
  • Expired CNI — the Certificate of No Impediment is only valid for 3 months. Time your application carefully
  • Assuming English ceremony — the legal civil ceremony is in Spanish. Hire an interpreter if neither party speaks Spanish
  • Not checking municipal rules — each ayuntamiento has its own rules about off-site ceremonies, dates, and times. Some don't perform weddings on certain days or during August

Getting married in Spain is a wonderful experience, but the paperwork requires patience and advance planning. If you're a Costa del Sol property owner planning your wedding, join the MUNDO Buyer Club for local recommendations — our community includes verified professionals who can help make your Spanish wedding day perfect.

Share this article

Free: UK-to-Spain Relocation Checklist

Healthcare, residency, banking, schools — everything you need for a smooth move to the Costa del Sol.

Join the MUNDO Buyer Club

Get weekly property intel, market insights, and be first to know about new listings on the Costa del Sol.

Join Free

Useful Resources

Also available in: 🇬🇧English|🇪🇸Espanol

Disclaimer

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.

Join the MUNDO Buyer Club

Get weekly property intel, market insights, and be first to know about new listings on the Costa del Sol.