A client asked: I married a South African who is in
America on a visa. How do we legally register our marriage with South Africa
now?”
Many South Africans marry abroad and later discover that
their marriage is not automatically captured on the South African population
register. Here is a practical outline of how to register a U.S. marriage with
the Department of Home Affairs while you are still overseas.
In theory – although not always smoothly in practice – you
should be able to follow these steps to have your marriage recorded in South
Africa:
- Get
a certified copy of your marriage certificate
Obtain the official marriage certificate issued by the authority in the U.S. state where you got married. - Have
the marriage certificate apostilled
Because both the U.S. and South Africa are parties to the Hague Apostille Convention, the marriage certificate must be apostilled by the relevant U.S. authority (usually the Secretary of State in the state where the marriage took place). - Complete
the required Home Affairs form
Download and complete form BI‑130 (Notification of Marriage) from the South African Department of Home Affairs. - Submit
your documents via the South African mission
Lodge the following with the nearest South African Embassy, High Commission or Consulate in the U.S.: - Certified
copy of your marriage certificate with apostille
- Completed
BI‑130 form
- Certified
copies of both spouses’ passports
- If
you are South African, a certified copy of your SA ID book or smart ID
card
- Proof
of South African citizenship (if applicable)
- Any
additional documents the mission may request
- Processing
by Home Affairs
The consulate will send your documents to Home Affairs in South Africa for processing. Once finalised, your marriage should be recorded on the National Population Register. - Follow
up regularly
Stay in contact with the consulate or mission to track progress. Processing times vary and delays are common.
Additional points to keep in mind
- If
either spouse was previously married, you will usually need to provide
proof that the prior marriage has legally ended (divorce decree or death
certificate).
- There
is no fee to register the marriage itself, but the mission may charge
consular fees for certifying or notarising documents.
In practice, delays, lost documents and inconsistent
feedback from Home Affairs are common, so it is wise to keep copies of
everything and to follow up politely but persistently.
