How to Elope in the Twin Cities: Minneapolis & St. Paul Elopement Guide (2026)
Eloping in the Twin Cities is easier than couples think — Minnesota has a 5-day waiting period, no residency requirement, and two of the most beautiful county courthouses in the Midwest. Here's the exact 6-step process I walk my Twin Cities elopement clients through, plus the locations, permits, and timing that actually make the day work.
Step 1: Get your Minnesota marriage license
Apply in person at Hennepin County Government Center (Minneapolis) or Ramsey County Courthouse (St. Paul). $115 fee, drops to $40 if you complete 12 hours of premarital education. Valid statewide once issued — a Hennepin County license works for a ceremony in Duluth. Five-day waiting period from application to ceremony, 6-month expiration.
Step 2: Choose your ceremony location
Three tiers for Twin Cities elopements:
- Courthouse ceremony — Hennepin County judges perform ceremonies Monday–Friday by appointment, $75. Ramsey County does not offer courthouse officiant services; you bring your own officiant.
- Public park ceremony — Minnehaha Falls pergola, Stone Arch Bridge, Como Conservatory Sunken Garden, or the Rose Gardens at Lyndale. Permit required for the reserved spaces (see the Minneapolis permit guide).
- Venue elopement — Aster Café, Nicollet Island Inn, Weisman rooftop, or a boutique hotel suite. Ceremony + intimate dinner in one location, typically $1,500–$4,000 for a 6–20 guest elopement.
Step 3: Find an officiant
Minnesota allows any ordained minister (including online ordinations from Universal Life Church, American Marriage Ministries, etc.), judges, and court commissioners. No pre-registration required in most counties. Bring photo ID and your ordination credential to the ceremony.
Step 4: Book your Twin Cities elopement photographer
Most elopements need 2–4 hours of coverage: getting-ready in a hotel suite, ceremony, 30–45 minutes of portraits at 1–2 locations, and a first-look at dinner. My elopement collections start at $1,800 for 3 hours. See the full Minnesota elopement photographer page.
Step 5: Plan your photo timeline for Twin Cities light
The Twin Cities elopement sweet spot is a 4pm ceremony year-round: ceremony at 4:00, portraits during golden hour (5:30–6:45 in summer, 4:45–5:15 in winter), dinner at 7. This works at Minnehaha, Stone Arch, and every downtown location. For winter elopements, move everything two hours earlier — sunset is 4:30pm in December.
Step 6: File the license within 5 days
Your officiant signs and mails or files the marriage certificate with the issuing county within 5 days of the ceremony. Certified copies ($9 each) are available 2 weeks later and are required for name changes and insurance updates.
My favorite Twin Cities elopement itineraries
Minneapolis riverfront elopement: Hotel Ivy suite prep → Aster Café ceremony → Stone Arch Bridge portraits → dinner at Owamni. St. Paul historic elopement: James J. Hill House ceremony → Summit Avenue portraits → Landmark Center rooftop → dinner at Meritage. Courthouse-plus elopement: Hennepin County ceremony (10am) → coffee → Sculpture Garden portraits → Nicollet Island Inn lunch. See the Twin Cities wedding photographer hub for full metro coverage.
Frequently asked questions
How long does it take to elope in the Twin Cities?
Minnesota requires a 5-day waiting period after applying for your marriage license, so plan at least a week from license to ceremony. Same-day is not legally possible.
How much does a Twin Cities elopement cost in 2026?
Bare-bones courthouse: $190 in fees ($115 license + $75 officiant). Full-service Twin Cities elopement with photographer, venue, and dinner for 10: $4,500–$9,000. My elopement photography collections start at $1,800.
Do I have to live in Minnesota to elope in the Twin Cities?
No — Minnesota has no residency requirement for marriage licenses. Out-of-state couples can apply at any Minnesota county courthouse and marry anywhere in the state.
Can I elope at the Stone Arch Bridge?
Yes — the Stone Arch Bridge is MnDOT-owned and does not require a photo or ceremony permit for a small elopement (couple, officiant, photographer, up to about 15 guests). Plan for foot traffic and pick a weekday morning for the fewest interruptions.
Who signs the marriage certificate at a Twin Cities elopement?
Two witnesses over 16 plus the officiant. Your photographer can serve as a witness (I've done this for dozens of elopement clients when guest counts were small).
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