How to Elope in Los Angeles: Legal Requirements, Best Spots & What It Costs
Eloping in Los Angeles is easier than most couples realize. No waiting period, no residency rule, no blood test. What you need is a marriage license, an officiant, and ideally a beautiful spot. Everything else is optional. Here's the complete playbook.
In this article
- Why LA is one of the easiest places in the country to elope
- The exact legal steps (in order)
- The best elopement spots in Los Angeles
- Permits: when you need them and when you don't
- What an LA elopement actually costs
- The elopement timeline — how fast you can actually do it
- Elopement mistakes to avoid
Why LA is one of the easiest places in the country to elope
California has the most elopement-friendly legal structure in the United States:
- No waiting period. Get the license today, marry tomorrow (or the same day).
- No residency requirement. You can fly in from anywhere in the world.
- No blood test. Hasn't been required in decades.
- Confidential license option. Zero witnesses needed.
- The full state is available. Apply in LA County, marry anywhere in California.
Combined with LA's diversity of ceremony locations — mountains, beaches, desert, city rooftops, garden courtyards — it's genuinely hard to beat.
The exact legal steps (in order)
- Decide on your license type. Confidential (no witnesses, both 18+, living together) or public (one witness required). Most eloping couples choose confidential for simplicity.
- Book an appointment at any LA County Clerk office. Norwalk, Van Nuys, Beverly Hills, LAX, or Lancaster. Appointments fill up — book 2–4 weeks out at lavote.gov.
- Both parties appear in person with photo ID. Pay the fee ($86 confidential / $91 public). Walk out with the license.
- Get married within 90 days. That's your window.
- Your officiant files the license within 10 days after the ceremony. Now you're legally married.
The best elopement spots in Los Angeles
Beach
- El Matador State Beach (Malibu): Dramatic sea stacks and caves. Best at sunset. Permit required for organized ceremonies.
- Point Dume (Malibu): Cliffside views. More private than Zuma.
- Leo Carrillo (Malibu): Tide pools and coves. Gorgeous at golden hour.
- Paradise Cove: Private beach access through the café — no permit hassle.
Mountains and Canyons
- Malibu Creek State Park: Oak woodlands, meadows, and water. Permit required.
- Topanga State Park: Multiple ceremony spots. Quieter than Griffith Park.
- Griffith Observatory overlook: Sunset ceremonies with the entire city as backdrop. No permit needed for small groups of 10 or fewer staying on public paths.
- Franklin Canyon Park: Lake ceremonies. Peaceful and surprisingly quiet.
Gardens and Formal Venues
- Descanso Gardens (La Cañada): Rose garden, camellia forest, Japanese garden. Event permits run ~$250–$500 but the setting is exceptional.
- Huntington Library Gardens (San Marino): World-class gardens. Permit and advance booking required.
- Virginia Robinson Gardens (Beverly Hills): Historic estate. Small weddings only.
Urban and Unique
- Rooftops in DTLA, Hollywood, or the Valley: Depending on your hotel or venue; some allow short ceremonies with minimal logistics.
- LA Central Library courtyard: Historic, architectural, unusual.
- Courthouse steps (Norwalk or Beverly Hills): If you're going truly minimal, the courthouse itself has charm.
Desert (same-day day trip)
- Joshua Tree (2.5 hours): Surreal desert landscape. Permit required; easy to obtain.
- Palm Springs: Vintage desert glamour, sunrise ceremonies with San Jacinto as backdrop.
Permits: when you need them and when you don't
General rule for LA public land:
- 10 people or fewer, no setup, no chairs, no amplification, on a public path: Usually no permit needed.
- 11+ people, any setup, or any private area: Permit required.
Who issues permits:
- City parks (LA Rec and Parks): Run $100–$500 depending on park
- County parks (LA County Rec): Run $75–$300
- State parks (Malibu beaches, Malibu Creek): Run $250–$500
- National parks (Angeles, Santa Monica Mountains): NPS Special Use Permit — plan 4–8 weeks ahead
Always confirm with the specific location. Rangers do check on weekends, and a cited ceremony is nobody's fun.
What an LA elopement actually costs
A realistic breakdown for 2026:
- Marriage license: $86–$91
- Officiant (full-service, including consultation, script, filing): $395–$595
- Photographer (2–4 hours): $500–$2,000
- Permit (if needed): $75–$500
- Florals (bouquet and boutonniere): $100–$300
- Attire: Whatever you want it to be
- Celebration dinner for 2: $100–$500
Realistic total for a well-executed LA elopement: $1,500–$4,000. Compared to the LA wedding average of $42,000–$51,000, eloping buys you the same legal marriage and often a more emotional experience for a tenth of the cost.
The elopement timeline — how fast you can actually do it
Here's how fast an LA elopement can happen from zero:
- Day 1 (Morning): Book your officiant. Book your Clerk appointment. Book your photographer.
- Day 1–3: Officiant intake call (20–30 min) for a personalized script.
- Day 3–5: Appointment at County Clerk, walk out with license.
- Day 5–7: Ceremony.
Two weeks is comfortable. One week is doable. 72 hours is possible if the officiant has availability and the County Clerk has an open appointment.
Elopement mistakes to avoid
- Not reading permit rules. A ranger asking you to stop mid-ceremony is not the memory you want.
- Scheduling a beach elopement at high tide. Check tide charts. Same goes for sunset times — a ceremony that starts at 6:45pm on an October Tuesday is happening in the dark.
- Forgetting witnesses for a public license. If you chose public, you need at least one. A passerby can technically work, but don't rely on luck.
- Hiring a brand-new officiant to save $150. Your elopement has no rehearsal, no coordinator, no do-over. The officiant is your whole operational team. Pay for experience.
- Assuming your officiant files the license. Confirm. Not every officiant does — especially online-ordained friends. A license that never gets filed means you're not legally married.
- Not telling someone. You don't owe anyone an announcement. But one or two people who know the date can help in small ways — a witness, a photographer, a breakfast after.
Quick Answers
Do I need a permit to elope in Los Angeles?
It depends on location. On public land, a small ceremony (10 or fewer people, no setup, no amplification) typically doesn't require a permit. Any setup, beaches, state parks, or groups of 11+ require a permit from the managing agency. Always confirm with the specific location.
How much does it cost to elope in Los Angeles?
A well-executed LA elopement runs $1,500–$4,000 total. That includes marriage license ($86–$91), officiant ($395–$595), photographer ($500–$2,000), permits if needed ($75–$500), and florals or dinner.
How fast can I elope in LA?
As fast as 72 hours if everything aligns. California has no waiting period, so you can apply for your license and marry the same day. Most elopements come together within 1–2 weeks.
Can I elope at the beach in Malibu?
Yes. Popular spots include El Matador, Point Dume, Leo Carrillo, and Paradise Cove. Small ceremonies (10 or fewer) on a public beach usually don't require a permit, but state parks do — confirm with California State Parks.
Do I need witnesses to elope in California?
Only if you get a public marriage license. If you get a confidential license (requires both parties be 18+ and living together), you need zero witnesses.
What's the difference between eloping and a courthouse wedding?
A courthouse wedding is officiated by a court commissioner at the courthouse itself. An elopement is any small, private ceremony — typically with a professional officiant at a meaningful location. Both are legally identical; eloping gives you more control over the experience.
Planning an LA elopement?
My elopement package is $495 all-inclusive. It covers the consultation, a short custom script, the ceremony itself, and marriage license filing. I can officiate with as little as 72 hours notice. Just reach out.
Schedule a complimentary consultation