The short answer
They will need a visitor's visa and a letter of non-impediment from their home country. Then you will go through the normal marriage registration process with Home Affairs.
The whole question
Dear Athalie
My partner is from Pakistan and wants to come to South Africa to marry me and live here. Should he apply for a visitor's or spousal visa? Where should he apply for it and how much will it cost? Is he allowed to get married while here on a visitor's visa? How would it work?
The long answer
To take your questions one by one:
What visa must he apply for - a visitor’s or spousal visa?
He can apply for a visitor’s visa for 90 days. He cannot apply for a spousal visa as you are not yet married. The visitor’s visa can be extended for a further 30 days, but he needs to apply for an extension 60 days before the visa expires.
He must apply for the visa from Pakistan.
The cost of the visitor’s visa is R3,700. Apart from the visa fee, a VFS service charge of 6,011 PKR will be levied for applicants applying at the visa application centre. All fees are to be paid in cash [PKR]. (VSF Global is the company that manages visas, etc. for Home Affairs.)
He will be able to marry while here on a visitor’s visa, but he might have to extend the visa to allow for delays in marriage processes at Home Affairs.
This is what is involved in getting married here:
He will have to obtain a letter of non-impediment from Pakistan or the embassy in South Africa. This letter must state that he is not married in his country of citizenship and so is able to get married in South Africa. (If this letter of non-impediment is not in English, it must be accompanied by an official sworn translation.)
These are the Home Affairs requirements for you as a South African to get married:
If you have been married previously, you must show proof of divorce or death of previous partner
You are not a minor (under age of 18)
You are not suffering from severe mental illness which prevents you from understanding what marriage is.
The first step to getting married is to register your intention to marry with Home Affairs and apply for a Department of Home Affairs Marriage Certificate at least three months before your wedding date.
The following documents must be submitted together with the Home Affairs marriage forms (which you can ask for from the Home Affairs offices):
Identification documents, such as a South African ID card
Both passports, if one partner is not South African
A completed BI-31 form, which declares that you are legally allowed to marry
Official divorce decree, stamped by the court, if one partner has previously been married
Death certificate, if one partner has been widowed
Before a marriage is declared legal in South Africa, couples are required to attend a Home Affairs marriage interview. Be warned that this interview could take weeks to set up with Home Affairs. The interview is to make sure that both parties are entering the marriage of their own free will. If you don’t attend an interview, the marriage certificate will not be registered and the marriage will be declared null and void. They may interview you and your partner separately to make sure that it is a genuine marriage.
Once they are satisfied, they will give you a letter that you must give the marriage officer on the day you get married. This letter gives the marriage officer permission to sign off the official wedding papers and log the necessary documents with Home Affairs to register the marriage. Which means that you can get an official abridged marriage certificate from Home Affairs after your marriage ceremony.
Wishing you the best,
Athalie
Answered on Sept. 10, 2024, 10:06 a.m.
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