Find Obion County Marriage Records

Obion County Marriage Records start with the county clerk in Union City and then move outward to older books, archive collections, and state record systems when the marriage is historic. If you need a license, a certified copy, or a family history clue, the best path depends on the year and the detail you already know. Obion County has a solid marriage record run, so a careful search can move from a modern clerk request to a much older index or filmed record without leaving the county behind.

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Obion County Quick Facts

1823 County Established
$97.50 Marriage License
$5.00 Certified Copy
Union City County Seat

Obion County Marriage Records Office

The Obion County Clerk is the main local office for marriage licenses and certified copy requests. The office is at the Obion County Courthouse in Union City, and it is the first place to check when you want a new license or a copy of a recent Obion County Marriage Records file. Both applicants must appear together in person, and the clerk needs valid photo identification plus Social Security numbers or affidavits if a number is not available.

Obion County does not require a waiting period or a blood test. The license is valid for 30 days and can be used anywhere in Tennessee. If either person was married before, the clerk may ask for a certified divorce decree or death certificate. The county clerk site at obioncountytn.gov/county-clerk is the best local starting point for office details, hours, and copy request instructions in Obion County.

A look at the Obion County Clerk shows the office that issues and files Obion County Marriage Records.

This county does not have a safe local manifest image, so the page leans on the clerk source and the archive resources that matter most for Obion County researchers.

Office Obion County Clerk
Obion County Courthouse
1 Bill Burnett Circle
Union City, TN 38261
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM Central Time
Phone (731) 885-9601
Fax (731) 885-9602
Website obioncountytn.gov/county-clerk

How to Search Obion County Marriage Records

Start with the names you know, the rough year, and the county. Those details usually point you to the right book or index faster than a broad search ever will. For a recent Obion County Marriage Records request, the county clerk is the right office. For an older record, the county clerk may still help, but you may also need FamilySearch, the Tennessee State Library and Archives, or the Tennessee Virtual Archive. The right route depends on where the marriage falls in time.

FamilySearch is one of the best research aids for Obion County because it points to several useful collections. The county page at FamilySearch Obion County lists marriage books and a long county index run. The research notes show collections including Obion County Marriage Records 1824-1880, 1861-1965, and the 1823-1975 index. Those collections help when the clerk file is not enough on its own.

The most useful search details are simple:

  • Full names of both spouses
  • Approximate marriage date or year
  • County of marriage, which is Obion County
  • Maiden name if you know it
  • Whether you need a certified copy or a research lead

If you are searching older Obion County Marriage Records, the Tennessee State Library and Archives can help with indexed and microfilmed material. The TSLA guide at sos.tn.gov/tsla/guides/vital-records-at-the-library-and-archives explains the statewide date ranges and tells you what details the archive staff need. For many records from 1862 through June 1945, the county name, the date, and both spouses' names matter most. For July 1945 through December 1973, the state index is arranged by groom, so that name becomes the key search point.

A source-linked image from the TSLA order records portal gives another route for older Obion County Marriage Records when you cannot search in person.

Obion County marriage records ordering portal at the Tennessee State Library and Archives

That portal matters when the record is old enough for archive search and you want staff to check the film or index for you.

Obion County Marriage Records Fees

The fee structure in Obion County is straightforward. A marriage license costs $97.50. If you present an approved premarital preparation course certificate, the fee drops to $37.50. Certified copies of a marriage record cost $5.00 per copy. Those are the basic costs most people need, and they make it easy to plan before you go to Union City.

The clerk accepts cash, check, or money order. If you are mailing a copy request, include the full names of both spouses, the date of marriage, your contact information, and payment. The clerk can use those details to match the record and send it back faster. Fee amounts can change, so confirm the current rate before you travel or mail a request in Obion County.

For a modern Tennessee certificate, the state office is the right source. The Tennessee Department of Health Office of Vital Records at tn.gov/health/health-program-areas/vital-records.html explains the statewide marriage certificate path and the fee structure for records from 1974 forward.

A linked image from the Tennessee Department of Health vital records page shows the state certificate route for recent Obion County Marriage Records.

Obion County marriage records and Tennessee Department of Health vital records access

That state office matters when the marriage is recent enough to sit in modern vital files instead of the county book alone.

Historical Obion County Marriage Records

Obion County was established in 1823 from Indian lands, and that early start gives the county a deep marriage record run. The FamilySearch notes show records from 1824 to 1880 and 1861 to 1965, plus an index from 1823 to 1975. That span is useful for family history because it covers the early county years, the post-Civil War period, and a long later stretch that can help bridge missing links.

Older Obion County Marriage Records may also be easier to understand when you think about the Tennessee date split. The state archive guide says statewide marriage records begin in July 1945, while earlier records were kept at the county level. That means a marriage from the 1800s or early 1900s usually starts with the county clerk or the archive side, not the modern certificate office. TSLA is the bridge between those older county books and the statewide system.

A source-linked image from the Tennessee Virtual Archive marriage collection shows another public path for historical Obion County Marriage Records.

Obion County Marriage Records in the Tennessee Virtual Archive

TeVA is useful when you want to check an image or index entry before you ask for a formal copy.

Historical searches can be helped by the Tennessee State Library and Archives, especially when the county book is worn or the family spelling shifts over time. The archive and the county clerk work together in practice, even when the record is decades old. That is why a good Obion County search often starts local and then widens to Nashville only when the date makes that move necessary.

Obion County Marriage Records and State Rules

For Obion County, the state rules matter as much as the county office. Tennessee marriage records move between county books, state filing, and archive storage based on age and record type. The county clerk records the license and return. The Office of Vital Records keeps modern certificates. The Tennessee State Library and Archives handles older records once they leave the active county file set.

The CTAS marriage records guide at ctas.tennessee.edu/eli/marriage-records explains the legal framework behind that flow, including the county clerk's record duties and the state filing rules under Tennessee law. If you need the record for a foreign use case or an overseas filing, you may also need a certified copy that can be authenticated on the state side. That is why it helps to know which office has the record before you start.

The county clerk returns the signed license, the state archive stores older material, and the Department of Health serves modern certificates. Those three paths cover most Obion County needs. If you are not sure which one fits, start with the county clerk in Union City and work outward. That is usually the fastest way to get the right record without paying for the wrong search twice.

Tennessee treats marriage records as confidential for 50 years, so age can change where you request the record and what you can see. That is why an Obion County search often starts with the date before it starts with the office name.

If the county office cannot finish the search, the TSLA portal can help with a state-level request: TSLA order records portal.

A linked image from the Tennessee Office of Open Records Counsel supports the public access side of Obion County Marriage Records once the record is old enough to be open.

Tennessee open records guidance for Obion County marriage records

That guidance helps when you want to know whether the record should be open and which office should answer the request.

Union City Marriage Records

Union City is the county seat, so it is the main place to start for Obion County Marriage Records. The county clerk office there handles licenses, returned records, and certified copy requests. If you are local to Obion County, Union City is the easiest anchor point for a marriage search because it is where the official county work happens. The courthouse address is also the best place to keep in mind if you are trying to match a family note to an actual record.

Local history work also benefits from keeping Union City in the search. If a family paper or a church note says the marriage happened in Union City, that is enough to point you toward the county clerk. The city itself does not change the office you need, but it helps narrow the search and cut down on dead ends. That is especially useful when a marriage record is old and only part of the information survives.

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Cities in Obion County

Union City is the county seat and the main place tied to Obion County Marriage Records. The county clerk office is there, the courthouse is there, and the record trail begins there. Because this build does not include a separate Union City page, Union City stays the key city name to use when you search or request copies in Obion County.

If you are searching from another community in Obion County, you still end up at the county clerk in Union City. That keeps the search local and simple. The county seat is the point where marriage licenses are issued and where the returned records are kept, so Union City remains the practical center for the county's marriage-record work.

Nearby Counties

Marriage research can spill across county lines. If a couple lived near the edge of Obion County or filed in a nearby seat, check the adjoining counties before you stop the search.

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