# Getting Married in Thailand: A Foreigner's Honest Guide

> How a foreigner gets legally married in Thailand — the embassy affirmation, MFA legalisation and amphoe registration, explained step by step.

So you have decided to marry in Thailand. Congratulations, truly. Whether you are marrying a Thai partner or another foreigner who fell for this country, it is a lovely chapter to begin in Chiang Mai. One gentle word before we start: what follows is **general information, not legal advice**. Rules, fees and the exact documents vary by nationality and change without much fanfare, so always confirm the current requirements with your own embassy, the district office, and, for anything complex, a reputable Thai lawyer. With that said, here is the honest picture as we understand it.

## The ceremony and the paperwork are two different things

This trips up almost everyone, so let us say it plainly. A temple blessing, a Lanna-style ceremony with monks, flower garlands and a string-tying ritual is beautiful and deeply meaningful, but it does **not** make you legally married. What makes a marriage legal in Thailand is registration at a government district office. The two can happen on the same day or weeks apart; many couples handle the legal bit quietly, then celebrate properly. If you are planning a ceremony, a little reading on [Thai etiquette](/blog/thai-etiquette-for-visitors) goes a long way, and a [khantoke dinner](/blog/khantoke-dinner-chiang-mai) makes a warm, very Chiang Mai reception.

![Getting Married in Thailand: A Foreigner's Honest Guide](/blog/getting-married-thailand/visual.webp)

## Step one: an affirmation of freedom to marry

For a foreigner, the trail usually begins in Bangkok. Your **embassy or consulate** issues an **affirmation** (sometimes called an affidavit) of freedom to marry, a sworn statement confirming you are single and legally free to wed. You will generally need your passport, and, if you have been married before, your divorce decree or your former spouse's death certificate. Some embassies want you to swear it in person, some require it to be **notarised**, and a few add a short waiting or publication period, so book ahead and ask exactly what your country expects. This single document is the hinge the rest of the process turns on.

## Step two: translation and legalisation

Your affirmation will be in your own language, and Thai officials need it in Thai. So the next step is a certified **translation**, followed by **legalisation** at the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs (the Legalisation Division of its Department of Consular Affairs, in Bangkok). They check the translation against the original and apply an official stamp that tells any Thai authority the document is genuine and accepted. It is fiddly rather than difficult, and it is the stage where a little patience, or a trustworthy agent, saves a lot of queuing. A few words of [the language](/blog/learn-thai-language-chiang-mai) never hurt either.

## Step three: registering at the amphoe

Now the part that actually marries you. You take your stamped, translated documents to any **amphoe** (district office, called a *khet* in Bangkok) anywhere in Thailand, including right here in Chiang Mai. You sign the register before two witnesses, the registrar records it, and you walk out with an official Thai marriage certificate. That is it. It is the **amphoe**, not the temple, that makes the marriage real in the eyes of the law, and a Thai marriage, once registered, is recognised internationally. Witnesses can be friends or family; if you are newer to the city, our notes on [making friends in Chiang Mai](/blog/making-friends-chiang-mai) may help you find two warm faces.

![Getting Married in Thailand: A Foreigner's Honest Guide](/blog/getting-married-thailand/visual-2.webp)

## What it means for your visa

Marriage opens a door, but it is not an automatic right to stay. The common follow-on is the **marriage visa** (the non-immigrant "O" based on marriage to a Thai national), which lets a foreign spouse live here long term. It typically carries a **financial requirement**, generally either a sum held in a Thai bank account or a proven monthly income, but the exact figures shift with policy, so please confirm the current threshold rather than trusting any number you read online, including ours. You will want a [Thai bank account](/blog/thai-bank-account-chiang-mai) in place, and once you are living here on a long-stay visa, the routine [ninety-day report](/blog/ninety-day-report-chiang-mai) becomes part of life. If marriage is not your route, our guides to the [DTV visa](/blog/dtv-visa-chiang-mai) and to [retiring in Chiang Mai](/blog/retiring-in-chiang-mai) cover the alternatives.

## Prenuptial agreements, and doing it calmly

One practical detail worth flagging: if you want a **prenuptial agreement** to be valid under Thai law, it must be registered **at the same time** as the marriage itself, at the same amphoe, with witnesses. You cannot tidy it up afterwards, so decide early and, given how this interacts with property and inheritance, take proper advice. It matters all the more if you later plan on [buying property](/blog/buying-property-chiang-mai) together.

None of this should overshadow the happy part. Handle the paperwork without drama, then turn to the things that make a Chiang Mai wedding sing, the garlands, the [Lanna handicrafts](/blog/lanna-handicrafts-chiang-mai), the long northern lunch with everyone you love. If you are still finding your feet here, our thoughts on [settling in](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai) may help the rest fall into place. Confirm the details, breathe, and enjoy it. We will keep the kettle on.
