Davis County Marriage Records

Davis County marriage records give you a direct path to current licenses, older county files, and certified copies tied to local families. Start with the county clerk in Farmington if you need help right now. Then move to the Utah State Archives when you need older entries or extra history. Davis County has a long paper trail, and the county website makes the first search step simple. You can also use state tools and genealogy sources when you need to bridge the gap between a modern request and a much older record set.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Davis County Quick Facts

1887 Records Start
Farmington County Seat
Current Clerk Records
State Archives Historical Access

Davis County Marriage Records Office

The county clerk is the first stop for Davis County marriage records. The office handles current marriage licenses and keeps the local record trail tied to the county. If you need a fresh copy, a license question, or help matching a name to the right file, the clerk office in Farmington is the best starting point.

The Davis County website at daviscountyutah.gov is the clearest place to begin. It points you toward county services, and it keeps the contact path simple. The county also posts marriage license information at its marriage page, which is useful when you want current rules before you visit or call.

The county clerk page at daviscountyutah.gov/clerk gives you another route into the same office. That matters when a record search starts with a simple office question instead of a formal copy request.

The local office details are straightforward.

Office Davis County Clerk
Mailing Address PO Box 618
Farmington, UT 84025-0618
Physical Address 61 South Main Street
Farmington, Utah 84025
Phone (801) 451-3324
Fax (801) 451-3421

The Davis County homepage at daviscountyutah.gov is also the local source tied to the county image below. It shows the main office path that most people use first.

Davis County marriage records county website

That page helps you move from a broad search to a real office contact.

Search Davis County Marriage Records

Searches in Davis County work best when you start with the basics. Bring the name of the bride or groom, a rough date, and any clue about Farmington or another Davis County place. The clerk office can use that to narrow the file. For recent records, the county office is the main path. For older records, the search often moves to archive holdings or genealogy indexes.

When you are ready to ask for a marriage record, the county website helps you confirm the right office. The marriage information page at daviscountyutah.gov/clerk/marriage/information is useful because it keeps the local process in one place. That matters when you are trying to avoid a second trip or a missed detail. The clerk office also expects standard identity details, so come prepared.

For a Davis County marriage record search, keep these details ready:

  • Full name of the bride or groom
  • Approximate date of the marriage
  • Farmington or another Davis County location clue
  • Valid driver license or state ID
  • Social Security numbers if the office asks for them
  • Parents' names and birthplaces when you are filling out a license request

Both parties must appear in person when they apply for a new license, and the county asks for parents' full names and birthplaces, including the mother's maiden name. Previous marriage information is also part of the process when it applies. That makes Davis County a good fit for direct, in-office searches instead of vague guesswork.

Historical searches still matter here. Davis County marriage records run from 1887 to the present, so older searches often need a wider lens. The county clerk is the live source, but the archive trail is what helps when the local office no longer has the exact paper copy you want.

Davis County Marriage Records History

Davis County has a strong marriage history. Farmington was long known as a Gretna Green spot, where couples went to avoid waiting around. That local habit shaped the way many families remember the county. It also means Davis County marriage records can matter far beyond the county line when you are tracing a family line or proving an old event.

For older research, the Utah State Archives at archives.utah.gov is the next step. It preserves historical records that help fill in the gaps between county files, court papers, and family notes. The FamilySearch Utah vital records guide at familysearch.org is another useful trail. It explains how Utah county marriage records tend to show names, residences, ages, and witness names.

The Library of Congress guide at guides.loc.gov gives a wider view of Utah marriage record history. That helps when a Davis County file points back to church records, probate papers, or another early source. Before 1887, civil registration was not required in Utah, so some marriages were documented in temple or church records instead of a county file.

Utah marriage and divorce records become public after 75 years, which is why older files are often easier to use for family research than newer ones. The county record trail and the archive trail work best together. That is especially true in Davis County, where some families have records that jump between local offices and older historical sources.

Note: If a Davis County marriage is not showing in the clerk office, the next best path is usually the archive trail or a genealogy index.

The county marriage story also helps explain why Davis County is still a useful search place today. The office is current, but the record set reaches back far enough to support both legal and family-history work.

Davis County Marriage Records and Copies

If you need a certified copy, Davis County is still the right place for current local records. For state-level certificates, Utah keeps marriage and divorce certificates in the Office of Vital Records and Statistics for the 1978 to 2010 range. The state portal at vitalrecords.utah.gov is the cleanest way to start that search. If you want to order directly, the certificate page at vitalrecords.utah.gov/certificates/order-a-vital-record-certificate explains the order path.

For county copies, ask the Davis County Clerk about the record you need. That office holds current records, and it can help you figure out whether the copy comes from the county or the state. VitalChek also serves Utah marriage certificate requests through its Utah marriage page, which can help if you need an online route for a certified copy.

The marriage license information page at daviscountyutah.gov/clerk/marriage/information is worth a second look when you are asking about copies. It keeps the local office path and the license process close together. That saves time when the question is not just search, but also how to get the right paper in hand.

Some people also need a record for use outside the United States. If that is your case, Utah's authentication office at authentications.utah.gov handles apostilles and authentications. That step does not change the marriage record itself. It just gives the copy the extra certification that some foreign agencies want.

Davis County marriage records marriage information page

The marriage information page is the best match when you need the office rules before requesting a copy.

Note: County and state offices do not always hold the same date range, so check the event year before you request a copy.

Davis County Marriage Records Access

Utah public records law gives people a path to inspect public records, and Davis County marriage records fit into that larger framework when the record is public. The statute text on the Utah Legislature site at Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2 explains the state's record-access structure. That matters when you are trying to separate a simple search request from a certified vital record request.

In practice, the county clerk is still the most useful first stop for recent Davis County marriage records. Older files may be held by the Utah State Archives or described in genealogy sources. That means the best search path can change with the date. A modern license request and a 19th century family search do not use the same route.

When you are looking for a local paper trail, the county office and the archive system work together. The county clerk keeps the living record side. The archive side helps when the record has aged into a historical source. That split is normal in Utah, and Davis County follows it closely.

Use the county office for direct help, the state vital records portal for certified state certificates, and the archive tools for history. That combination covers most Davis County marriage record needs without making the search more complex than it has to be.

The county clerk page at daviscountyutah.gov/clerk is the source behind the image below. It is the local office path most people need first.

Davis County marriage records county clerk office

The clerk office image matches the local contact point most people will use first.

When the record is already public, you can often get farther by asking for the right date range than by making the request bigger. A narrow, clear search is usually faster in Davis County.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Helpful Utah Marriage Records

Davis County marriage records sit inside a bigger Utah system. If your search reaches beyond the county file, state resources are the next move. The Utah State Archives at archives.utah.gov can help with older material, while the state vital records portal at vitalrecords.utah.gov handles statewide certificate questions for the years it covers.

Genealogy research tools can also save time. FamilySearch's Utah vital records guide at familysearch.org and the Library of Congress guide at guides.loc.gov both help you sort county records from older court, church, and temple sources. Those tools matter when a Davis County marriage was recorded in a different place than you expected.

If you need a certificate for a foreign authority, Utah's authentication page at authentications.utah.gov is the final step. It keeps the record useful beyond Utah without changing the original file. Davis County's local office, the state archive, and the state vital records system all play a role in that path.

For people who only need the county office, the Davis County Clerk page at daviscountyutah.gov/clerk stays the best local bookmark. It is plain, direct, and tied to the office that actually holds the current record trail.