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Marrying a Foreigner

    

WHAT TO DO IF YOU WISH TO MARRY A FOREIGNER IN  THE CZECH REPUBLIC


Plan the place and date of your wedding a few months ahead, you will need time to collect all the required documents. Visit any Registry Office competent for the area where you want to have your wedding. The Registry Office is can be found in the City Hall or in the Offices of the Municipal District.

1. What documents do you have to submit to the Registry Office?
 
Foreigners with permanent or long-term residence and EU nationals need:


2. A certificate of no impediment to marriage

EU nationals must also have a Certificate of No Impediment to Marriage (Vysvědčení o právní způsobilosti k uzavření manželství).
The Certificate must contain:

 

The issuance of this Certificate is under the purview of your country of origin. Ask at your Embassy if they can help and issue the document or if you have to travel to your country of origin to get it.

If the Certificate lacks any information mentioned above, you must have a document which proves the information (for example the confirmation of your residence, a document proving your citizenship etc.)

If you are unable to obtain the confirmation because of demonstrable and substantial difficulties you can substitute a sworn statement (affidavit) certified by a consular officer of your country of origin. In case you come from a country which does not have a consular agreement with the Czech Republic regarding mutual document recognition, the signature of the consular officer must be legalized by the Ministry of Czech Foreign Affairs.

The certificate must not be older than 6 months.

 

3. A confirmation of your marital status and residence

If there is no record of your marital status and permanent residence in the Certificate of no impediment to marriage, you must obtain a confirmation of your marital status and residence (potvrzení o rodinném stavu a pobytu).

The issuance of this confirmation is under the purview of your country of origin.

Enquire at your Embassy if they can help and issue the document or if you have to travel to your country of origin to get it.

The confirmation must be no older than 6 months.

 

4. Confirmation of your legal residency status in the Czech Republic

 

5. Other documents required if you were previously married

If you are a widow or a widower – your spouse died: attach the death certificate of your deceased spouse to the required documents. You do not have to provide the death certificate if the fact that you are a widow/er is stated in the Certificate of no impediment to marriage

If you are divorced – please attach a valid legal ruling on the divorce. This ruling must be recognized in writing as being effective in the Czech Republic. If you were divorced by a court in another country, the ruling must be verified as effective in the Czech Republic (by superlegalisation or by providing an Apostille, if no international agreements say otherwise) and it must be translated into Czech. The translation must be notarized  

If you were divorced in a foreign country and one of you is a Czech citizen, you must apply to the Supreme Court to recognize the divorce ruling. Some countries are exempt from this rule (no need to apply to the Supreme court): countries which are signatories to the Agreement on International Legal Assistance and the Convention on the Recognition of Divorces and Legal Separations (part of The Hague Conventions)


6. When can the Registry Office waive the requirement of documents?

In exceptional situations when you are unable to get all the needed documents from your country of origin, you can try to get the Registry Office to waive some of required documents. This especially applies to foreigners who were granted International protection.

You will have to submit a confirmation or an affidavit that there are substantial difficulties in obtaining the documents.

The Registry Office usually decides in 30 days.

 

7. General requirements for all submitted documents

 

8. Legalization of the documents

 9. Setting a marriage in the Registry Office

The registrar will check if you submitted all the required documents.

The engaged couple must come in person to prove their identities and they must fill in an Application for Entering into a Marriage (Dotazník k uzavření manželství). The registrar can help you to fill it out.

You will set the date, place and other details about the wedding.

 

10. Surname after the wedding

On the application you must enter the surname you want to use after the wedding. You will also fill in the surnames of the children born within your marriage. If you are going to change your name, you must also change your travel document after the wedding. You have these alternatives:

 

11. Wedding in an unusual place

If you want to have your wedding somewhere other than in the ceremonial room in the City Hall or the City District Hall (e.g., outdoors, in a hospital….) you must get permission from the Registry Office. Write the application and submit it to the Registry Office competent for the area where you want the wedding to be held.

The application can be filed by just one of the partners, but he/she have a power of attorney from the other partner. The signature on the power of attorney need not be notarized.

The place of the wedding must be dignified in order to get the permission of the Registry Office to hold the wedding there.

 

12. If you do not speak or understand Czech

You must make sure that a court translator attends the wedding. The Registrar may recommend a translator.

The translator must prove his/her identity and license upon his/her arrival before the wedding ceremony starts.

 

13. What does the wedding ceremony look like?  

You will arrive with witnesses (and translator) at the venue.

The registrar will ask you to submit your identity documents.

According to Czech law a marriage is a lifelong union of a man and a woman, its main purpose is to start a family and raise children in a proper fashion. At the start of the ceremony the registrar introduces the engaged couple to the person officiating the wedding and declares that “the engaged couple” is unaware of any circumstances hindering the marriage that they know each others’ state of health and they have considered future property arrangements, housing and financial arrangements for the family.

At the end of the ceremony the wedding officiate asks, if the engaged couple are entering into the marriage freely and voluntarily. Your answer will be “ano” (literally “yes”; an equivalent to “I do” in Czech) even if a translator is present. With that you accept all the obligations related to marriage.

You and your witnesses sign the Wedding Records Book.

 

HAVE YOU DECIDED TO HAVE A RELIGIOUS CEREMONY?

14. What do you need to do?

 

15. Fees (valid for both civil and religious ceremonies):

 

16. What needs to be done after the wedding?

 

17. Change of residence status after the wedding

If both you and your spouse have a long-term stay — you will retain a long term stay. You can change the purpose of the stay though, to long-term stay with the purpose of a family reunification.

If you have a long-term stay and your spouse has permanent residence or International protection — you can apply to the Department of Asylum and Migration Policy for a long-term stay with the purpose of family reunification with a foreigner who has a permanent residence. When you have this type of stay, you do not need a work permit, but you can only be part enrolled in the public health insurance system if you work in a company which has its seat in the Czech Republic.

You have a long term stay and your spouse is a Czech or EU citizen — you can apply for a temporary stay for a family member of a Czech/EU citizen. With this status you can apply for permanent residence in 2 years (if you had a long-term residency for at least a year prior to the wedding, you can apply one year after the wedding).

You do not have any type of residence and your spouse is a Czech/EU citizen — you can stay in the Czech Republic for up to 90 days without visa. Apply in the Department of Asylum and Migration Policy for a temporary stay of a family member of the Czech/EU citizen.   

You do not have any type of residence and your spouse has long-term stay or permanent residency – you are eligible for a long-term stay status, but you have to apply at the Czech Embassy in your country of origin. Your application will be processed within 270 days.  

 

18. Marriage by proxy – exceptional circumstances

 

19. What else you should know

Wife and husband have equal rights and equal obligations. They are obligated to provide mutual alimentation and support, help each other and raise children together. They make decisions about family matters together. They can act on behalf of each other in everyday matters and acts of one of the spouses in family matters are binding for the other.


What are shared assets?


20. Registered partnership

You need similar documents as if you were to get married:


A list of the Registry Offices is available here: https://www.statnisprava.cz/rstsp/ciselniky.nsf/i/d0054
An overview of bilateral agreements on legal assistance is available on the web pages of the Ministry of Justice: https://www.justice.cz/web/msp/dvoustranne-smlouvy
An overview of the signatory countries of the Hague Conventions is available here: http://www.hcch.net/index_en.php?act=conventions.status&cid=41
Details you will find the the web site of the Department of Asylum and Migration Policy: http://www.mvcr.cz/clanek/uzavreni-manzelstvi-statniho-obcana-ceske-republiky-s-cizincem-na-uzemi-ceske-republiky.aspx
 

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