Colorado Covid Wedding Regulations
If you are planning to officiate a wedding in Colorado, check out our page Get Ordained in Colorado.
Online weddings are not allowed in Colorado.
Colorado has officially fully reopened since COVID-19. For indoor wedding ceremonies, individuals ages 12 and up are required to wear face coverings.
At the moment, many County Clerk's Offices in Colorado are operating with modified schedules. Please plan accordingly, as hours may have changed or an appointment may be necessary. Colorado Executive Order D 2020 014 has authorized County Clerks to accept online marriage license applications.
Couples can temporarily apply for a marriage license online in Colorado. However, licensing requirements have not changed, and online applicants must present physical copies of ID for visual verification. Couples should contact a County Clerk's Office to schedule an appointment, whether they plan to apply online or in person.
These policy changes are temporary and tied to the Covid-19 pandemic, and at the moment we can not predict how long they will remain in effect. Colorado Executive Order D 2020 014 established the policy changes discussed on this page, and this temporary order has been extended every 30 days since March 2020.
For more information, contact your County Clerk's Office. You can review Colorado's policy order below.
Colorado Executive Order D 2020 014
COVID-19, social distancing, travel bans, lockdowns… Many couples are being forced to downsize their wedding plans and for many guests, the only way to attend is with their computers and mobile phones.
If your guest list is shrinking to just the couple and officiant, or maybe just the couple, Colorado marriage laws regulate who must be in attendance, and how the ceremony is conducted. Here are some options to help adapt your wedding plans in Colorado to celebrate a COVID safe wedding.
For the sake of clarity, we differentiate virtual wedding ceremonies (or Zoom/Skype ceremonies) from livestream ceremonies by who is in attendance. If the officiant is officiating the vows from another place via video, then we call that a virtual or Zoom ceremony, since the people involved in the ceremony are interacting over whatever video platform is chosen.
However, if the couple and the officiant are present, but guests are watching remotely, we call that a livestream wedding since the ceremony itself is happening in one physical place. You can read more about what distinguishes each option here.
You can livestream any activity or event, and it doesn't matter where you are in Colorado, what you're doing or how many people are physically present with you. Some of the most popular platforms include Skype, Zoom, Google Hangouts, Facebook Live, and Instagram Live.
As long as you have a tripod and a phone with a good camera on it, your guests will be able to participate remotely. Many of these platforms even allow guests to comment, chat, and interact in other ways.
We realize that this is not always ideal, but ultimately, if couples choose to move forward with scaled down weddings and smaller guests lists, these communications platforms let friends and family around the world know that they are still being thought of.
For folks planning on livestreaming their nuptials, Here's How to Livestream Your Wedding.
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