Getting married in Colombia
emma9801@hotmail.com
Thank you,
Priscilla
´ó¿§¸£ÀûÓ°Ôº team
We had to go to the notaries and get our birth certificates, apply to be married, and we got married about a month later. They have a month-long waiting period to make sure you want to get married. It was very annoying at the time because I was on a time crunch and had to come back to the US. The cost was about 200'000 Pesos (about $120 USD). The marriage certificate took a couple of months to be ready. It's twice the size of a regular US marriage license and I cannot find a place to put it without having to bend or fold it. haha.
Stevens925 wrote:Bucaramunga has delicious hormigas colones.
I have never actually tried one! Definitely on the bucket list.
PhilipCo wrote:Getting Married in Colombia can sound a bit daunting, but I was lucky all the formalities were a breeze, once my Wife, found a Notary prepared to marry us, and yes, there were a number who would not entertain marrying a Colombiana to an Extrañjero!
The Notary in Medellin was brilliant, he did not want some of the papers that are listed on all the websites, he was happy with a apostillized copy of my divorce certificate, even though the divorce was ten months previously, birth certificate, and a photocopy of my passport, he saw the original once I arrived in Colombia, and that was it. I met the Notary once, before the Wedding, he was extremely friendly and talked at a pace that I could understand. On the day of the Ceremony, he arrived spot on time at the Salon we used, but told us, he could not stay on afterwards, as he was going to bury his Brother an hour later, he conducted the service, as if he were an old friend, it was a day I will never forget. That topped it for me, as most people would have just cancelled, he had my utmost respect, and now whenever I need a Notary, I travel to his Office, even though there are many nearer.
Please browse through all the posts on this thread and you will surely find some answers.
If you still have specific questions, do not hesitate to ask them directly on the forum for better orientation.
Best of luck,
Hasnaa
´ó¿§¸£ÀûÓ°Ôº Team
Could you kindly send me the contact info of the notary? I'm in Medellin and visited a few notaries here and they're asking for a lot. I was hoping to have an experience like yours.
Thanks,
Don
What about the colombian passport after i get married when i will earn it
The basic rule for opening a bank account is to have a cedula (Colombian ID card)
Otherwise when you got this it is easy.
Regards
Paula
Are you living in Colombia?
If not (as I understood before) you have to go to the Colombian consulate or the consulate that represent Colombia in your country.
You have to apply for a non touristic visa. Please refer to the web site of the Colombia to know which visas are available;
Then you have to convince the person in charge of the visas that you project, for going to Colombia, is realistic.
How are you going to live in Colombia? Speak Spanish (forget English in Colombia), $$ for installing, what king of job and so on...
You can also marry a Colombian lady and get a child with her. This simplifies a lot for cedula, but not for getting a job or for speaking Spanish.
Regards
Did you get the notary where is easy to get married in Colombia? I am not living in Colombia but I want to get married in January, my boyfriend is not Colombian and all the documentation and translations are difficult to get and I don`t have time. I`m actually thinking to do a symbolic ceremony. Does someone know a celebrant that do symbolic ceremony? or maybe a notary that is willing to do one?
Thanks
but due to recent changes we ended up hiring an atorney for about $700 , it was a well spent money , he did everything and booked an appointment with notory in matter of a few days .
Please do your home work , sometimes you need more documents than are listed
Good luck
Bram
Yes not always as easy as described especially if there are kids involved or a previous marriage.
If one of the tow got married (and divorced) in the past, you will have to prove in some way you got legally divorced. Usually the marriage and divorce mention on your birth certificate is enough.
Then kids. A "inventario solemne de bienes" is necessary. Or at least that's what the notaries try to make you believe. This piece of paper can get tricky to get for a foreigner, and even for a Colombian, requires some time (up to 2 months). But this paper is in fact only necessary if you have custody. And this is a "detail" notaries often tend to forget (because it is a great source of revenue for them).
Another thing to keep in mind: Each notary set his own level of requirements, and some go further to what the law actually requires. If your notary is too picky, look elsewhere. You may even want to tell your notary that you will shop around for a more understanding notary. He'll probably negociate. Of course the minimum legal requirements will always be necessary. You won't cut the document official translation and apostille steps, for instance.
Yes getting married requires some preparation work. I believe it is a good thing in a way. It is slowing down those who may want to get married too rapidly or without having thought well enough about it.
And yes there are a lot of formalities. She is Catholic so we had to take classes before marriage. We were in China at the time and we took the classes there. These classes had to be approved by our church in Acacias and then by the main church. I had to have all my documents translated and apostiled, including birth certificate and identity documents.
Then we had to get legally married and for this you have to be careful. If we registered with the notary in Acacias, every time we would need to update something legal about our marriage for any reason like taxes or houses or whatever we would have to go back to Acacias, so we picked the notary on 100th street. Much easier to get to, especially making the documents now for her to go to the states.
Before the wedding took a month of going places with our ID's and such to get the church's recognition. Then another month going to places to get my Colombian ID.
I know I couldn't have done this without her, she is always on top of things… thanks Sweetie.
hector from California usa
PhilipCo wrote:Getting Married in Colombia can sound a bit daunting, but I was lucky all the formalities were a breeze, once my Wife, found a Notary prepared to marry us, and yes, there were a number who would not entertain marrying a Colombiana to an Extrañjero!
The Notary in Medellin was brilliant, he did not want some of the papers that are listed on all the websites, he was happy with a apostillized copy of my divorce certificate, even though the divorce was ten months previously, birth certificate, and a photocopy of my passport, he saw the original once I arrived in Colombia, and that was it. I met the Notary once, before the Wedding, he was extremely friendly and talked at a pace that I could understand. On the day of the Ceremony, he arrived spot on time at the Salon we used, but told us, he could not stay on afterwards, as he was going to bury his Brother an hour later, he conducted the service, as if he were an old friend, it was a day I will never forget. That topped it for me, as most people would have just cancelled, he had my utmost respect, and now whenever I need a Notary, I travel to his Office, even though there are many nearer.
Would love to get this notary information from you! Thanks
Adamdh348 wrote:PhilipCo wrote:Getting Married in Colombia can sound a bit daunting, but I was lucky all the formalities were a breeze, once my Wife, found a Notary prepared to marry us, and yes, there were a number who would not entertain marrying a Colombiana to an Extrañjero!
The Notary in Medellin was brilliant, he did not want some of the papers that are listed on all the websites, he was happy with a apostillized copy of my divorce certificate, even though the divorce was ten months previously, birth certificate, and a photocopy of my passport, he saw the original once I arrived in Colombia, and that was it. I met the Notary once, before the Wedding, he was extremely friendly and talked at a pace that I could understand. On the day of the Ceremony, he arrived spot on time at the Salon we used, but told us, he could not stay on afterwards, as he was going to bury his Brother an hour later, he conducted the service, as if he were an old friend, it was a day I will never forget. That topped it for me, as most people would have just cancelled, he had my utmost respect, and now whenever I need a Notary, I travel to his Office, even though there are many nearer.
Would love to get this notary information from you! Thanks
I think this person ****Â or he would have said who the notary is.
Please note the post you quoted is dated 2012 and that this person is not a member anymore as his account is now permanently close.
Thank you
Maximilien
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