1.A valid passport or a carte de sejour.
2.A birth certificate extrait d'acte de naissance less than 3 months old
supplied by a bureau of records, not a hospital.
3.A certificate of "celibacy" (attestation tenant lieu de declaration
en vue de mariage ou de non-remariage) less than 3 months old.
4.A medical certificate (certificat médical prénuptial) less than 3
months old, stating that the individual was examined by a doctor en
vue de mariage. This can be provided by any qualified doctor
practicing in France.
5.The tests are: serological tests for syphilis, serological tests to
determine blood types and, for women, serological tests for rubella
and toxoplasma.
6.Proof of domicile (justificatifs de domicile). The resident party
must supply 2 documents proving residence in the commune, for example
an EDF bill, telephone account, rent receipt or residential insurance
documents.
7.If pre-nuptial agreements are to be made, this must be done with a
lawyer (notaire) who will provide a certificat du notaire which must
be submitted to the mairie. It must have been drawn up no more than 2
months prior to the marriage.
.8.If there are no pre-nuptial contracts, then the parties will be
married under the communauté réduite aux acquets. This means that what
each party owns personally before the marriage, or whatever comes to
them afterwards through inheritance, remains their property. Only that
which is acquired during the marriage is owned equally by both parties.
9.In the case of previous marriages the parties must provide a
certified copy of the death certificate of the deceased spouse or a
certified copy of the final divorce decree.
10.A child born prior to the marriage may be legitimised. The town hall
must be notified and a copy of the birth certificate provided (in
particular indicating the fact of recognition).
11.Foreign Nationals may be required to provide an Affidavit of Law
(certificat de coutume) and an Affidavit of Marital Status. These
statements concern marriage laws in the foreigners home country and
are required to certify that the party may, under law of their
country, be married. The relevant Embassy will have documents,
available at a fee.
The Civil Ceremony:
Originally posted by Luke & Christiane
> Hello All -
> I'm American and my fiancée is French. She is here on a 6 month
> tourist visa. We will have a church wedding in France in June, and are
> trying to figure out whether to get married legally in the US before
> she returns to France in March or to have the legal ceremony in France
> just before the church wedding. If all goes as planned, I will be able
> to spend the next year in France. We eventually intend to live in the
> US.
> I called the French consulate in New York, and a woman there
> recommended that we marry in the US because to marry in France would
> require that I have a carte de sejour or some such thing. But I would
> sooner trust someone with actual experience. We've seen posts in this
> group to the contrary: that because of Direct Consular Filing (a
> concept I haven't yet mastered) we would be better off marrying in
> France.
> If anyone could offer any advice we would be grateful.
> Many thanks,
Luke and Christiane