Register Office Wedding Photography

A guide on weddings and civil partnership ceremonies at register offices and how we photograph them

All photographs on this page were taken by us at real register office weddings

We’re Robin and Sarah and we’re Midlands wedding photographers based in Bromsgrove, Worcestershire

Register office weddings are often more intimate and photographed for a shorter time than a full wedding day.  They’re ideal for couples who ‘just want to get married’.  We’ve photographed them across the Midlands and beyond  for many years.

This page covers how register office ceremonies typically work, what to expect photographically, and some of the weddings we’ve been fortunate enough to cover.

Photographers Robin & Sarah relaxing on holiday
Wedding guests blow bubbles after ceremony at The Henley Room
Bride and groom in front of Woodstock Town Hall
Bride and dad enter wedding ceremony as guests watch
Bride and groom leave ceremony room at Bromsgrove Registration Office as guests clap
Groom places wedding ring on bride's finger
Bride and groom exchange wedding rings during wedding ceremony at Priory Place Registration Office in Doncaster
Groom gives wedding declaration as his bride smiles
Wedding guest hugs bride outside The Henley Room as the sun shines on her face

How a register office wedding works

What exactly is a register office?

A register office is the official local government building where marriages and civil partnerships are legally registered in the UK. You might know it as a registry office or registration office – all three terms are interchangeable. Unlike licensed civil venues, which are usually commercial premises such as a hotel or dedicated wedding venue, a register office is a council building and the wedding is always a legal ceremony conducted by an official registrar.

Bromsgrove Register Office
Bromsgrove Register Office

A wedding, or a civil partnership

Both weddings and civil partnerships can take place at a register office, and from a photography perspective the two are very similar. The key practical difference is in how the legal contract is formed – a marriage requires both partners to speak legally prescribed words aloud during the ceremony, while a civil partnership is completed by signing a document, with no requirement to say anything aloud. Couples forming a civil partnership can still choose to hold a full ceremony with guests, readings and personal promises if they wish. In short, the day can look and feel identical – it’s the legal mechanics behind it that differ.

Planning your register office wedding or civil partnership

When you’re starting to plan your day, there are legal and administrative steps to work through – giving notice of marriage or partnership, booking the registrar, and confirming your ceremony details. Requirements and timescales vary between local authorities, so it’s worth checking with your own register office early. If you’re in Worcestershire, the county council has a helpful guide to getting started: https://www.worcestershire.gov.uk/ceremonies/where-start

The register office ceremony

Register office ceremonies – whether a wedding or a civil partnership – all run to pretty much the same pattern and therefore how we photograph them is broadly the same.

From a photo perspective, the element we’re looking for above all else is genuine moments.  We don’t believe events need to be contrived, faked or performed for the camera. It’s about the interactions and expressions, your favourite people enjoying the proceedings.

Bride and groom kiss at end of wedding ceremony

How long is a register office ceremony?

Typically, a register office ceremony lasts around 20 minutes, plus the time needed for the pre-ceremony interviews. Timings can vary slightly if you’re including guest readings or personal vows.

Of course, this doesn’t include arrivals, confetti, hugs, group photos and portraits afterwards — which are often some of the loveliest parts of the day.

Arrivals

Very often, the ‘arrivals’ is the point where our photography begins.  Register office ceremonies tend to run to a tight schedule, so guests are usually asked to arrive promptly – there’s rarely the extended pre-ceremony milling around you might get at a church or larger venue. Guests gather, greetings are exchanged, and when asked, everyone heads inside in advance of the ceremony start.   It’s a gentle, unobtrusive way to start documenting the story of the day, working quietly in the background, catching the candid moments before the ceremony begins.

At about the same time, if there’s the opportunity and it’s practical, we’ll set up a quick portrait of you before you go in for the interview, in the surroundings of the register office itself.

Bride walks into Bath Guildhall main entrance
Wedding guests chat and relax before ceremony
Full-length portrait of bride in Mayor's Parlour at Woodstock Town Hall
Bride arrives in wedding car at Solihull Register Office
Bride, groom and best man laughing outside The Henley Room in Stratford-upon-Avon
Wedding ceremony at Henley Room in Stratford upon Avon
A beautiful bride wearing a detailed white wedding dress, holding a colourful bouquet of flowers and with a veil over her face stand in the doorway of The Henley Room in Stratford-upon-Avon

The registrar interview

Before the ceremony can begin, the registrar will conduct a short private interview with you – usually in a side room or the ceremony room before guests are admitted.  It’s a legal requirement but nothing to be concerned about –  just a formality to confirm your details and ensure everything is in order. The registrar interviews themselves aren’t something we photograph, so while you’re with the registrar we’ll be covering guests arriving and mingling.

The interview can be conducted together as a couple, or you can choose to have them separately.  If you’re choosing the separate option, then one partner usually has to arrive at the venue earlier than the other.

The register office ceremony

Before the proceedings start, we’ll have a brief word with the registrars to let them know how we work, where we’ll be positioned and anything we need to be aware from them. They’re usually very easy to work alongside.

There are usually two registrars – one who takes the role of officiant and who actually conducts the ceremony, while the other prepares the registration document and ensure all the paperwork is completed correctly.  They will make a short announcement before the ceremony starts – a reminder to switch phones off and more often than not, for guests to refrain from taking photographs until the end.

Bride and groom hold hands during wedding ceremony
Bride and groom listen to officiant during wedding ceremony

Civil ceremonies follow a specific legal structure.  For weddings, both partners must speak the declaratory words, confirming there is no legal impediment to the marriage, before exchanging their personal vows and wedding rings.  Civil partnerships only require the register to be signed in front of witnesses, however many choose to expand this to include similar ceremonial sections.  Unlike church or celebrant-led ceremonies, civil ceremonies must be entirely secular – no religious content is permitted in either the words spoken or the music chosen.

After the vows and ring exchange comes the moment everyone’s waiting for – the couple are pronounced and then there’s the kiss, usually accompanied by a round of applause – followed by the signing of the register. Photography of the register signing isn’t always permitted, but we’ll always find a way to capture a few pictures of the moment from a respectful distance before the registrar wraps up the ceremony and everyone follows the couple outside.

We’ll photograph the entire ceremony in an entirely unobtrusive manner, no pausing, no getting you to re-do anything.  Just the real moments and the genuine expressions.

Bride and groom kiss at end of wedding ceremony

After the ceremony: Confetti, hugs and group photos

Once the ceremony is over, everyone heads outside. Register offices run to a strict timetable and may have another wedding following shortly behind yours, so in most cases you’ll be unable to go back inside.

Outside is where it all comes to life. If you’re planning a confetti throw we’ll get guests into position before the couple emerges, so when they come out they get the full effect. After that comes the natural decompression – hugs, handshakes, tears, laughter – and this is some of our favourite photography of the day. We let it all unfold at its own pace and work quietly through it, never rushing anyone into the next thing. Group photos, if we’re doing them, come only once all of that has settled down naturally.

Group Photos: Before the wedding day we’ll have agreed a list of group photos with you, so there’s no thinking to do on the day – just names to call and places to stand. We generally recommend keeping the list to ten groups or fewer, though most register office weddings don’t need that many. On the day we’ll pick a spot that works for the backdrop and the light, and work through the list as efficiently as possible so nobody’s standing around longer than they need to be.

Couple photos following a registry office ceremony

Where we take the couple photos will always be decided between us in advance. Some register offices have attractive outdoor spaces that lend themselves naturally to portraits; the Elgar Room in Malvern, for example, sits on the edge of Priory Park, which we’ll almost always make use of. The Henley Room in Stratford-upon-Avon is within easy walking distance of the more photogenic parts of the town.

Some register offices are not in picturesque locations, in which case we’ll agree on a nearby location that works. Either way, you’ll know exactly where we’re headed before the wedding day.

Our couple photo shoots are all about giving the two of you some space and a chance to spend some time together. We’ll give you some direction and adjust your position when necessary so you present well to the camera, but these sessions are really more about capturing you two as a couple – how you interact and bounce off each other.  We’re also really keen on showing context – showing off the surroundings of your chosen location.

Bride and groom on stone bridge in Priory Park Malvern with beautiful trees in background
Bride and groom walking through street in Stratford-upon-Avon after getting married at The Henley Room
Bride and groom laughing under umbrella on steps of theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon
Close up of bride's fascinator while she sits on bench with new husband
Bride and groom on wooden bridge near The Elgar Room in Malvern
Bride and groom in streets of Stratford-upon-Avon
Bride hugs groom on pathway at Brueton Park, Solihull, with soft foliage surrounding them
Bride and groom walk hand in hand along riverside in Stratford-upon-Avon as public watch
Bride and groom laughing together outside old half-timber buildings in Stratford

“Robin was great on the day, super friendly and professional and he took us to some great locations. They are all amazing, exactly what we wanted. The slideshow with music was also a lovely extra and a great way to show our photos to friends and family. Thank you!!”

Linzi & Kenny

The Henley Room, Stratford-upon-Avon

Receptions following register office weddings

Many couples follow their register office ceremony with a reception elsewhere – we’ve seen receptions at  hotels, restaurants, pubs, a gathering at home or event a hired boat. The register office is the legal and ceremonial heart of the day, but the reception is where it all relaxes and opens out.

If we’re covering the reception, we’ll typically do the couple shoot while guests make their own way there, so by the time we arrive everyone is settled and the atmosphere is already going. we’ll start with a few establishing shots of the venue and then work through whatever the day brings – candid pictures of guests enjoying themselves, the couple moving around the room, table details if there’s a sit-down meal, and the cake cutting if that’s happening before we leave. It’s relaxed, unobtrusive coverage that follows the day rather than directing it.

Guests queue up for food at DIY wedding held at home
Bride and groom sit down for dinner at The Barn at Berryfields as wedding guests raise a toast
Young boy break dancing at wedding
Bride shares a laugh with friend during wedding reception
Wedding guests sit down for meal at The Woodsman restaurant in Stratford-upon-Avon
Wedding guests welcome bride to reception after registry office ceremony
Small wedding party raise a toast while on a river boat
Bride and groom cut wedding cake at Stratford upon Avon Townhouse

Register office weddings we’ve photographed across the Midlands & beyond

Over the years we’ve photographed weddings at register offices across the Midlands and beyond. A selection are listed below – some have full blog posts or venue pages, others are simply places we’ve worked and know well.

Photography Coverage

Most register office weddings are relatively intimate celebrations and coverage of two to three hours is often enough to cover everything from arrivals through to group photos and a photo session with the couple.  If  you’d like the reception covered then 3 to 4 four hours is a more typical starting point, though there’s no fixed rule – one of our register office weddings ran to a full twelve hour day!

Pricing

Part Day options are 2-4 hours, starting at £550

Half Day options are 5 or 6 hours, starting at £1250

These are explained more fully on our Small & Part Day Weddings page.

Full Day, which would typically cover morning preparations through to the evening are 8-10+ hours and start at £1800.

How much time do I need?

In the early stage of planning your wedding it can be tricky to get an idea of how much time you’ll require photography for.   We have a handy, in-depth coverage guide that explains how everything works, how much time different parts of the day take up and what to expect from the lengths of coverage we offer, including real-world examples.

FAQ for Register Office Weddings

A balanced mix of natural moments, beautiful portraits and a few arranged group photos.  Natural, relaxed and unfussy, with strong compositions, beautiful light, colour and life.

We’d definitely recommend a Zoom call to have a chat about your plans for the day and to see if our style matches your requirements.

You can read more about our process from start to end – and much more about how we work – on our Working With Us pages.

As standard, it’s one photographer (Robin).  For most smaller weddings, one photographer is usually sufficient.  If you’d really like to have a second photographer there then feel free to enquire and we can provide a quote.

Groups are important but generally it’s best to keep the list simple and avoid repetition.  Think about the group photos you’d want on your wall or on your mantelpiece and don’t go much deeper than that.

For time reasons we recommend a limit of 10 group arrangements but most of the smaller weddings we see have fewer than this.  Of course if you’d like more then we can have a chat about that in advance but having lots of groups can drag out this part of the day, so keep that in mind.  It really just depends on your requirements.

Travelling is fine!  Our prices are completely transparent with no hidden extras so any travel considerations are already built into the price we quote you.

Our Storybook Album can be added to the package when you first book or at any point before the the final balance is due (one month prior to the date).

There’s no single right answer — it really depends on how your day is planned and which parts you’d like photographed. Shorter coverage can work well for anything from a simple ceremony and a few group photos, through to including couple portraits and time into the reception.

If you’re unsure what will suit your plans best, see our extensive Wedding Photography Coverage Guide which will give you a clearer picture of what to expect.

Send us an enquiry and we’ll check our availability for your date.  We’ll then give you access to our Welcome Page which contains full pricing info.

Officially, it’s usually ‘Register Office’, although some local authorities use ‘Registration Office’. ‘Registry office’ is a more informal term, but people generally use all three interchangeably to mean the same thing.

Planning your wedding at a register office?

Get in touch to check availability

We’d love to hear from you