Blog6 min readFriend officiants

You just got asked to officiate. Now what?

Said yes to officiating? Here is your first move, what is legally required, and how to write the ceremony without staring at a blank page.

First three moves

L

Legal

Confirm what this location requires and who signs the license.

S

Structure

Lock the ceremony order before you write any words.

S

Stories

Interview each partner separately; specifics make it personal.

Say this back

I am honored, and I want to do this well. Can we set a time to talk through the ceremony, the legal steps, and the stories you want me to use?

1

Say yes on purpose, not only out of love

Being asked is a real compliment. Accepting it well means knowing what you are actually taking on: a legal role, a few minutes of public speaking, and a piece of writing that has to sound like these two people.

Do you have time to prepare in the months before, not just the week of?
Are you comfortable speaking slowly and holding a room without making it about you?
Have you asked the couple what tone they want, and what is off-limits?
2

Settle the legal part early and keep it boring

The ceremony can be emotional. The paperwork should be plain and confirmed months out. Marriage rules vary by location, so check the official requirements for the exact place the wedding happens.

What does this specific county or state require for someone to legally officiate?
Do you need to be ordained or registered, and by what date?
Who handles the marriage license on the day, who signs as witness, and where does it get filed?
3

Build the structure before you write a word

A blank document is where panic lives. An outline is where confidence starts. Get the order of the ceremony agreed first, then write into it section by section.

What is the agreed order: processional, welcome, the couple's story, readings, vows, rings, pronouncement, kiss, recessional?
Which moments are fixed and which are yours to write?
How long should the whole ceremony run, start to finish?
4

Gather the real stories, then write to them

A friend-led ceremony feels personal because the material is specific, not because you invented poetry under pressure. Interview each partner separately and let their own words carry it.

What do you actually know about how they met and who they are together?
What details should stay a surprise for one partner until the day?
Does the couple want to approve the full script, or just the tone and boundaries?
Legal first

Do the paperwork before the poetry

The most common officiant nightmare is not forgetting a line. It is a license problem discovered too late. Confirm ordination or registration, who signs, how many witnesses are required, and the filing deadline using official local sources before you write anything you care about.

Your early checklist

Confirm the date and exactly how many months you have to prepare.
Verify the legal requirements for the specific ceremony location.
Get a ceremony outline before you attempt polished words.
Interview each partner separately for real, specific stories.
Print a clean, readable script with cue notes, plus a backup copy.
Plan a rehearsal that covers movement, microphones, rings, vows, and license signing.

What to actually say when you accept

A warm yes with a plan attached reassures the couple far more than an enthusiastic yes with no follow-up. Something like:

I would be so honored. I also want to do this properly, not just show up and hope. Can we find a time to talk through the legal steps, the shape of the ceremony, and the stories you would want me to tell? I will take it seriously and keep you in the loop.

That signals the two things the couple most needs to hear: you are moved, and you are going to be organized about it.

Turn your yes into a finished ceremony

CeremonyLab takes you from a generous yes to a real plan: a ceremony outline, guided interviews with the couple, private script drafts they will not spoil for themselves, vow and reading coordination, rehearsal logistics, and a print-ready binder you can carry to the front.