Hi, I am planning to get married to my Vietnamese fiancee in April. We are doing the ceremony in Vietnam and I originally had plans to do the legal marriage there too because it's quite cheap. But I just discovered there is quite a difficult procedure for me to get my documents translated and notarized in Canada first. I am going off the procedure mentioned in the embassy website. The goal here is just to get it done legally and as cheaply as possible. If anyone has done this process before do you know if its cheaper to just get the marriage done in Canada? The thing I dont understand is when she comes to Canada will we have to pay for the health exam (I have employer health benefits but she is not legally my "spouse" yet?). Otherwise it is quite cheap for her to obtain her paperwork in vietnam (marriage status, police records, medical records) and get them translated and notarized. But I am betting it will cost a fortune for me to get the below documents translated and notarized in Canada!
https://www.vietnamembassy.ca/marriage-procedure
https://www.vietnamembassy.ca/marriage-procedure
- Single Status Declaration done before a Canadian notary public or Commissioner of Oaths (The statutory declaration must have your full name, present marital status and your permanent address in Canada.
- Notarized copy of Marriage Search, issued by Provincial Vital Statistics certifies that no marriage certificate or marriage record of the applicant has been found for the period from the beginning of legal age for marriage to date.
- Notarized copy of Medical Certificate, issued by an authorized medical organization or physician and clearly indicates that the applicant is free from mental and infectious diseases, has no sexually transmitted diseases (especially free from HIV/AIDS) with supporting reports of physician examination and blood tests and is generally healthy and fit to get married (only the page with the comments of doctor needs to be translated into Vietnamese; results of tests are not required to be translated).
- Notarized copy of Birth Certificate certified by a Notary Public or Commissioner for Oath. In case of having no copy of Birth Certificate (lost, dismissed or cannot obtained), the applicant should make an Affidavit or Statutory Declaration in lieu of Birth certificate.
- Notarized copy of personal documents (Passport, Citizenship Card/Landed Immigrant document).
- Notarized copy of Certificate of changing name (if any)