There is a 3-day waiting period before a marriage ceremony can be performed after a marriage license is issued. However, Florida couples who attend a premarital course from the Miami-Dade premarital provider list skip the waiting period and may be married on the same day the license is issued.
Requirements. When applying for a marriage license both spouses must be present. If one or both of the applicants are minors, under 18 years old, additional requirements apply. All applicants must present a valid federal or state government photo identification with the correct legal name, date of birth and signature.
All Notices of Commencement must be record via the Clerk of Courts. To view recording options available, please visit Clerk of Courts. You may eRecord your document through one of our approved vendors. With this option, you retain your original document and the recorded image is available the next day.
You can have your ceremony the same day you receive your Marriage License. If one or both of you are a Florida Resident, a 3-day waiting period applies. For example: A Florida-Resident couple, who receives their license on Tuesday, can have their wedding ceremony 3 days later, on Friday.
A couple wishing to be married in Florida must be prepared to provide their Social Security numbers or any other available identifications numbers, such as driver license numbers or other photo IDs (passport, military ID), to the Clerk's office to apply for a marriage license.
Public Records Requests However, if you are unable to locate the records online, you may submit a Public Records Request form. This form may be submitted by mail to Records Management, Miami-Dade County Clerk of Courts, P.O. Box 14695, Miami, FL 33101 or by email to cocpubreq@miamidade.
All applicants must present a valid federal or state government photo identification with the correct legal name, date of birth and signature. Driver license issued by any state in the U.S. Passport. U.S. military ID. Alien registration card. State identification card issued by any state in the U.S.
Contact Clerk of the Court and Comptroller For general information, call 305-275-1155 for the Interactive Voice Response System.
Engagement letters are traditionally used by certain professional service firms, particularly in finance, accounting, law, real estate appraisal, and consulting, to define the specifics of the business relationship, or in the case of an appraisal – the assignment expectations.
The content of an engagement letter often includes important details such as the scope of services to be provided, fees or billing arrangements, confidentiality clauses, dispute resolution mechanisms, and any other relevant terms agreed upon by both parties.