The requirements to contract a valid common law marriage differ between jurisdictions as follows:
Colorado Colorado's Supreme Court revised the elements for common law marriage in three related rulings on January 11, 2021, in light of
Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644, 674–75 (2015), and also in light of changing social practices, in the cases of
In re Marriage of Hogsett & Neale, 2021 CO 1 (January 11, 2021),
In re Estate of Yudkin, 2021 CO 2 (January 11, 2021), and
In re Marriage of LaFleur & Pyfer, 2021 CO 3 (January 11, 2021). The Colorado Bar Association summarizes the holding of the cases in a summary of the lead case,
Hodges, which states: The Supreme Court revisited the test for proving a common law marriage that the Court articulated over three decades ago in
People v. Lucero, 747 P.2d 660 (Colo. 1987). Because many of the indicia of marriage identified in
Lucero have become less reliable, particularly in light of the recognition of same-sex marriage and other social and legal changes, the Court refined the test and held that a common law marriage may be established by the mutual consent or agreement of the couple to enter the legal and social institution of marriage, followed by conduct manifesting that mutual agreement. The core inquiry is whether the parties intended to enter a marital relationship, that is, to share a life together as spouses in a committed, intimate relationship of mutual support and obligation. Colorado, by statute, no longer recognizes common law marriages, domestic or foreign, entered by minors in Colorado. See Section 14-2-109.5, Colorado Revised Statutes. Colorado, Montana, and Texas are the only U.S. states to recognize both
putative marriage and common law marriage.
District of Columbia According to the District of Columbia Department of Human Services, a common law marriage is "[a] marriage that is legally recognized even though there has been no ceremony and there is no certification of marriage. A common law marriage exists if the two persons are legally free to marry, if it is the intent of the two persons to establish a marriage, and if the two are known to the community as husband and wife." Common law marriages have been recognized in the District of Columbia since 1931. Holding common law marriages legal, District Court of Appeals Justice D. Laurence Groner said,
Iowa Adm. Rule 701—73.25 (425) of the Iowa Administrative Code, titled Common Law Marriage, states the required elements to establish a common-law marriage: (a) a present intent of both parties freely given to become married, (b) a public declaration by the parties or a holding out to the public that they are husband and wife, (c) continuous cohabitation together as husband and wife (this means consummation of the marriage), and (d) both parties must be capable of entering into the marriage relationship. No special time limit is necessary to establish a common law marriage. Edit: 701—73.26 Rescinded, effective October 2, 1985. This rule is intended to implement
Iowa Code section 425.17. The public declaration or holding out to the public is considered to be the
acid test of a common law marriage.
Kansas Under Kansas Statute 23-2502, both parties to a common law marriage must be 18 years old. The requirements to establish a common law marriage in Kansas are: (1) capacity to marry; (2) a present marriage agreement; and (3) a holding out of each other as husband and wife to the public.
Montana A common law marriage is established when a couple: "(1) is competent to enter into a marriage, (2) mutually consents and agrees to a common law marriage, and (3) cohabits and is reputed in the community to be husband and wife."
Oklahoma The situation in
Oklahoma has been unclear since the mid-1990s, with legal scholars reporting 1994, 1998, 2005, and 2010 each as
the year common law marriage was abolished in the state. However, as of August 2022, the Oklahoma Tax Commission continues to represent common law marriage as legal, and the Department of Corrections continues to reference common law marriage, though that could refer to older marriages. No reference to the ban appears in the relevant statutes; the 2010 bill that attempted to abolish common law marriage passed the state Senate, but died in a House committee. and a reputed ban in 2010 cannot be found in its statutes.
Texas The Texas Family Code, Sections 2.401 through 2.405, define how a common law marriage (which is known as both "marriage without formalities" and "informal marriage" in the text) can be established in one of two ways. Both parties must be at least age 18 to enter into a common law marriage. First, a couple can file a legal "Declaration of Informal Marriage", which is a legally binding document. The form must be completed by both marriage partners and sworn or affirmed in presence of the County Clerk. The Declaration is formally recorded as part of the Official County Records by Volume and Page number, and is then forwarded by the County Clerk to the Texas Bureau of Vital Statistics, where it is again legally recorded as formal evidence of marriage. This is the same procedure that is used when a marriage license is issued and filed; the term "Informal" refers only to the fact that no formal wedding ceremony (whether civil or religious) was conducted. Second, a couple can meet a three-prong test, showing evidence of
all of the following: • first, an agreement to be married; • And after such agreement,
cohabitation (lived together) within the State of Texas as husband and wife; and • there, represented to others (within the State of Texas) that the parties are married. Regarding the second prong, in the actual text of the Texas Family Code, there is no specification on the length of time that a couple must cohabitate to meet this requirement. As such, an informal marriage can occur under Texas law if the couple lives together for as little as one day, if the other requirements (an agreement to be married and holding out as married to the public) can be shown. Dissolution of this type marriage requires formal Annulment or Divorce Proceedings, the same as with the other more recognized forms of 'ceremonial' marriages. However, if a couple does not commence a proceeding to prove their relationship was a marriage within two years of the end of their cohabitation and relationship, there is a legal presumption that they never agreed to be married, but this presumption is rebuttable.
New Hampshire New Hampshire recognizes common law marriage for purposes of
probate only. In New Hampshire "[P]ersons cohabiting and acknowledging each other as husband and wife, and generally reputed to be such, for the period of 3 years, and until the decease of one of them, shall thereafter be deemed to have been legally married." Thus, the state
posthumously recognizes common law marriages to ensure that a surviving spouse inherits without any difficulty.
Utah The status of common law marriage in
Utah is not clear. Government websites claim that common law marriage does not exist in Utah but other legal websites state that "non-matrimonial relationships" may be recognized as marriage within one year after the relationship ends. Whether this amounts to recognition of non-marital relationship contracts (dubbed "
palimony agreements" by the media after the famous California case
Marvin v. Marvin), or
post-factum recognition of common law marriage is a subject for debate. In any case, Utah will only recognise the relationship if it has been validated by a court or administrative order: "[A] court or administrative order must establish that" the parties: (1) "are of legal age and capable of giving consent"; (2) "are legally capable of entering a solemnized marriage under the provisions of Title 30, Chap. 1 of the Utah Code; (3) "have cohabited"; (4) "mutually assume marital rights, duties, and obligations"; and (5) "hold themselves out as and have acquired a uniform and general reputation as husband and wife" In Utah, the fact that two parties are legally incapable of entering into a common law marriage, because they are already married, does not preclude criminal liability for bigamy or polygamy. == Representative legislation in some states that no longer permit domestic common law marriage ==