Blog Details Main Image
Published on
June 1, 2026
Category
Booking & Availability
Back to all Blogs

How Many People Get Married in Las Vegas Each Year?

Las Vegas still marries tens of thousands of couples each year. Learn what Clark County marriage statistics show, how licenses differ from marriages, and why the Wedding Capital of the World still matters.
Overview
Las Vegas still lives up to its Wedding Capital of the World reputation, but the real numbers are more useful than the slogan. In recent years, Clark County has recorded roughly 69,000 to 78,000 marriages per year, with marriage license totals usually slightly higher than recorded marriage totals. Those numbers show how active the Las Vegas wedding market remains for elopements, destination weddings, local couples, vow renewals, and after-ceremony document services.
Clark County tracks both marriage licenses issued and marriages recorded, and those numbers are related but not identical.
Recent Clark County totals show tens of thousands of couples marry in the Las Vegas area each year.
The statistics can help couples understand popular seasons, high-demand months, and why planning early still matters.

Las Vegas Wedding Statistics

How Many People Get Married in Las Vegas Each Year?

A data-backed look at how many couples marry in Clark County each year, why license counts and marriage counts are different, and what those numbers mean for couples planning a Las Vegas wedding.

Quick answer

In recent years, roughly 69,000 to 78,000 marriages have been recorded in Clark County each year. If you are asking how many individual people get married, that means roughly twice that number of people because each marriage involves two spouses. Marriage license totals are usually slightly higher than recorded marriage totals because not every license necessarily becomes a recorded marriage in the same reporting period.

What counts as a “Las Vegas wedding” in the statistics?

When people ask how many people get married in Las Vegas each year, they usually mean how many couples marry through Clark County. Clark County includes Las Vegas and the surrounding area where most destination weddings, Strip weddings, chapel weddings, elopements, and local civil ceremonies are recorded.

The County Clerk tracks both marriage licenses issued and marriages recorded. Those numbers are related, but they are not exactly the same. A license is issued before the ceremony. A marriage is recorded after the ceremony is performed and the completed certificate is filed.

Before ceremony License issued

The couple receives permission to marry in Nevada after completing the license process.

After ceremony Marriage recorded

The officiant completes and files the certificate after the ceremony so the marriage can be recorded.

Common wording Couples married

When people say “how many people got married,” they often mean how many marriages or couples were recorded.

For a deeper explanation of the paperwork, read our Marriage License vs. Marriage Certificate vs. Proof of Marriage guide.

How many couples have gotten married in recent years?

Clark County’s recent statistics show that Las Vegas remains an extremely active wedding destination. The totals shift from year to year, but the annual recorded marriage count has stayed in the tens of thousands.

Year Recorded marriages Marriage licenses issued What it means
2025 69,363 70,598 A slightly softer year, but still close to 70,000 recorded marriages.
2024 75,326 76,779 A stronger year with more than 75,000 recorded marriages.
2023 72,862 74,275 A year showing continued post-pandemic wedding demand.
2022 77,946 79,279 One of the stronger recent years, approaching 80,000 licenses issued.

As of the latest available 2026 statistics used for this guide, Clark County had already recorded 24,471 marriages and issued 25,905 marriage licenses through May 2026.

Marriage statistics can change slightly

Clark County notes that license and certificate counts may fluctuate because of corrections or administrative changes. Treat these numbers as official working statistics for planning and context, not as permanent marketing slogans.

Why are license totals higher than marriage totals?

Marriage licenses and recorded marriages are not the same thing. A couple gets a marriage license before the ceremony. The marriage is recorded after the ceremony is performed and the officiant files the completed certificate.

That is why the license count can be slightly higher than the recorded marriage count in the same year. Some couples may obtain a license and marry later. Some records may be filed after a reporting cutoff. Some counts can also shift because of administrative corrections.

Term When it happens Why it matters
Marriage license issued Before the ceremony The couple has permission to get married in Nevada.
Marriage ceremony performed On the wedding day The couple says vows before an authorized officiant and witness.
Marriage recorded After filing The completed certificate is filed and becomes part of the official record.
Certified proof of marriage After the record is available Couples can order certified documents for name changes, agencies, travel, or international use.

If you need official proof after the wedding, visit our certified marriage certificate copy pickup or certified copy mail order pages.

Which months are busiest for Las Vegas weddings?

The busiest months can change each year, but Clark County statistics often show stronger activity around spring and fall. Those seasons tend to be more comfortable for outdoor ceremonies, destination travel, special dates, and wedding photography.

For example, recent data shows strong totals in months like April, May, October, and November in several years. This does not mean every couple needs to avoid those months. It means popular months can affect officiant availability, ceremony timing, hotels, restaurants, photography, and location logistics.

Spring Comfortable weather

Spring can be attractive for outdoor ceremonies, travel, family visits, and desert photography.

Fall Popular ceremony season

Fall often feels easier than peak summer for couples who want outdoor or scenic ceremony options.

Special dates High-demand moments

Valentine’s Day, New Year’s Eve, numerology dates, and holiday weekends can create extra demand.

For date-specific planning, read our special wedding dates in Las Vegas guide.

Why do so many couples still get married in Las Vegas?

Las Vegas is still one of the easiest places for couples to imagine a wedding that feels memorable without requiring a traditional full-scale wedding plan. Couples come for chapels, resorts, hotel suites, private homes, scenic desert locations, Downtown backdrops, outdoor ceremonies, vow renewals, and spontaneous-feeling elopements.

The appeal is not only the number of chapels. It is the flexibility. Couples can choose something quick and legal, personal and private, iconic and photo-friendly, luxury and planned, or simple and paperwork-focused.

Simple legal process Couples can apply for a Nevada marriage license and then have the ceremony performed by an authorized officiant.
Destination wedding energy Las Vegas combines travel, celebration, dining, entertainment, photography, and ceremony options in one place.
Flexible ceremony styles Couples can choose secular, Christian, interfaith, LGBTQ+ affirming, vow renewal, special-date, or custom ceremonies.
After-wedding documents Couples can order certified proof of marriage after the ceremony is recorded, which supports name-change and legal-document steps.

For ceremony options, browse our Las Vegas ceremony styles or start with our Las Vegas elopement guide.

What do the numbers mean for your wedding plans?

The statistics are interesting, but the practical meaning is simple: Las Vegas is busy enough that couples should not treat every date, officiant, location, restaurant, hotel, or add-on as automatically available.

You can still plan a simple ceremony. You can still elope. You can still have a same-day or short-notice wedding in some situations. But popular dates, weekends, spring and fall months, holidays, and scenic locations deserve more planning.

Book earlier for popular dates Special dates, weekends, holidays, and high-demand seasons can affect availability.
Keep your ceremony plan realistic A simple, personal ceremony can be more enjoyable than overloading the day with too many moving parts.
Confirm the license step first No legal Nevada wedding ceremony can be completed without the marriage license.
Plan your witness and documents Someone other than the officiant must witness the vows, and certified proof of marriage comes after filing.

Helpful next steps include our guide to choosing a Las Vegas wedding officiant and our FAQ on how far in advance to book.

What happens after all those couples get married?

After a legal Las Vegas wedding ceremony, the officiant completes the marriage certificate and files it with the Clark County Clerk’s Office. Once the record is filed and available, couples can order certified proof of marriage.

This after-ceremony step matters because the wedding day is not the end of the paperwork. Couples may need certified copies for name changes, passport updates, immigration, travel, benefits, personal records, or international document use.

Name change Certified certificate

Many couples use certified proof of marriage to begin name-change steps after the ceremony.

International use Apostille

Some foreign agencies may require apostille verification on a certified Nevada marriage certificate.

Record lookup Online search

Couples can use Clark County’s record tools to verify their marriage record after filing.

For help after the ceremony, review our Las Vegas marriage record search guide, name-change guide, and apostille support.

Las Vegas wedding statistics FAQs

How many couples get married in Las Vegas each year?

In recent years, Clark County has recorded roughly 69,000 to 78,000 marriages per year. The exact total changes each year and may be updated if corrections or administrative changes affect the records.

How many people get married in Las Vegas each year?

If you count individual people instead of couples, the number is roughly double the number of recorded marriages. For example, 69,363 recorded marriages would represent 138,726 individual spouses.

How many marriage licenses did Clark County issue in 2025?

Clark County’s statistics show 70,598 marriage licenses issued in 2025, with 69,363 recorded marriages for the same year.

Why are marriage licenses and recorded marriages different numbers?

A marriage license is issued before the ceremony. A recorded marriage happens after the ceremony is performed and the certificate is filed. Timing, filing dates, and administrative updates can make the totals slightly different.

Is Las Vegas still the Wedding Capital of the World?

Yes, Las Vegas continues to be widely known as the Wedding Capital of the World, with tens of thousands of marriages recorded in Clark County each year and a large wedding tourism industry built around ceremonies, venues, travel, and after-wedding documents.

What months are popular for Las Vegas weddings?

Popular months can vary, but recent Clark County statistics often show strong wedding activity in spring and fall. Special dates, holidays, weekends, and weather-friendly months can affect availability.

Plan your Las Vegas wedding with clear next steps

Be part of the Las Vegas wedding story

Ready to plan a simple, legal Las Vegas wedding ceremony?

Las Vegas Wedding Officiant helps couples plan personal ceremonies with clear guidance around licenses, officiant services, witnesses, ceremony timing, certified proof of marriage, and after-wedding documents.

Related Blogs