Acquiring New Jersey Marriage Records Online

By Claire Dowell


If you need to get a copy of marriage records in New Jersey, the State Office of Vital Statistics and Registry should be your first stop. The office has all the New Jersey Marriage Records that were filed beginning the year 1901 up to the present. If it is the older records that you need to obtain, though, especially those from 1848 to 1900, the right office to approach is the State Archives. There are also microfilms at the Archives for marriage records from 1901 up to 1940, but these are all for in-person use only. You cannot take them home or make copies of them.

There are many reasons why you would need to obtain marriage records. You may want to verify the personal history of a person, especially if you do not know him or her that much yet. You may also want to get a copy of your records for personal file keeping, and for keeping your personal file updated. A family tree or genealogy project is also a good reason for obtaining marriage records. Some government and business agencies also require copies of marriage records for certain transactions.

It is not difficult to file for a marriage records request in New Jersey. As long as you have all the requirements ready, you won't encounter any problems. For starters, you need to prepare your valid ID; a photo ID will be even better. You should also present a proof of your relationship to any of the individuals who own the record as New Jersey laws do not allow just anybody to obtain certified copies of marriage records. Only the couple (named on the record), their parents, sibling, legal guardian or representative, spouse, child, or grandchild, are authorized to get certified copies. Those who work with State or Federal agencies, as well as people complying with a court order, are also allowed to get a certified copy of a Marriage Record.

If you do not qualify for a certified copy, you will be given a certification. In the certification, it will be clearly indicated that the public record you get are not to be used for identification or legal purposes. The fee for the initial record request is $25, while additional copies are at $2 each, but only if you ask for them concurrently with the first copy. You can find information about how to order for public records by visiting the New Jersey Vital Statistics website.

As most state offices receive hundreds (or maybe even thousands!) of requests every day, you will be asked to wait for a few days or weeks before your get what you need. If you hate waiting, you can always choose to go for a better alternative: online record providers. Using the Internet as their work space, online record searchers are faster and more efficient than state agencies because they can access their comprehensive database whenever they want to. There's no request traffic to be worried about, so you are bound to get the New Jersey Marriage Records as soon as possible. The request process is simple, too, as all you need to do is complete a form and provide all the essential details of the record you want to obtain. After the request is submitted, the processing starts, and pretty soon, you'll get the file you need.

What a lot of people like about online record providers is that everything can be done at home. No need for you to disrupt your schedule. With just a few clicks of the mouse and entering of data, you will get what you need. Best of all, you don't need to pay for an additional fee for every extra copy that you request. With online record providers, you pay once only - and a very minimal fee at that - you get the Marriage Record, plus unlimited access to all other public records that you may need in the future. Now, isn't that what being practical is all about?




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