Yes, I have experience with this! The way it typically works if you are a US citizen in Latin America is that you take a printed statement affirming you have never been married to the US embassy in that country, and you get it notarized. That is ten accepted by the civil registry in that country. If you look at the embassy website, there is usually an faq section about getting married that mentions that
Notarial services can be booked ahead of time on embassy websites, typically they don't do walk-ins any more. I don't know how it works in Cuba though given that the embassy may have restricted service because of the US-Cuba relationship,but you could try calling them
waqitzikin t1_iwjbi4t wrote
Reply to How can I officially prove in Massachusetts that I have never been married? by Kantmzk
Yes, I have experience with this! The way it typically works if you are a US citizen in Latin America is that you take a printed statement affirming you have never been married to the US embassy in that country, and you get it notarized. That is ten accepted by the civil registry in that country. If you look at the embassy website, there is usually an faq section about getting married that mentions that
Notarial services can be booked ahead of time on embassy websites, typically they don't do walk-ins any more. I don't know how it works in Cuba though given that the embassy may have restricted service because of the US-Cuba relationship,but you could try calling them