Your fairy godmother’s guide to what really happens with your name after you say “I do”.
From keeping your surname to combining or changing it, and what it means for your passport, drivers licence and other important ID and documents in New Zealand.

💍 So you’ve tied the knot! Yay you two!!!
You put those rings on, popped the bubbles, and floated home on a cloud of just-married feels 💍✨ Now comes the next magical question: do I need to change my name?
In New Zealand, the good news is ~ you don’t have to fill out a mountain of forms to make it happen. Whether you keep your name, share your husband or wife’s or create a brand-new combo that’s uniquely “you two,” the choice is totally yours ~ and super duper easy!
💕 Your Name Options After You Say “I Do”
When you get married in New Zealand you can:
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Keep your last name ~ stay true to your personal identity.
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Take your partner’s last name ~ go all-in on the united front.
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Hyphenate or combine both names ~ for the best of both worlds.
✨ Example: If Alex Coleman marries Jaime Eastwood, either or both can use: Coleman Eastwood, Coleman-Eastwood, Eastwood Coleman or Eastwood-Coleman.
Whatever you choose, it’s all perfectly valid here in NZ. There’s no “right way” ~ only what feels right for you.
Plus all of these options do not require you to change your name formally through Births, Deaths and Marriages government department.
However if you’re both thinking of changing to a completely new name altogether ~ it’s quite an involved process and you will have to apply and pay a fee. Read more here.
🪄 How to Change (or Not Change) Your Name in NZ
Here’s the fairy-dust-sprinkled truth: you don’t usually need to do anything official to use your new name after marriage.
You can simply start using it right away. Most organisations like banks and government departments will accept your marriage certificate as proof if they need ID to update your records.
You’ll even be sent a handy little form to update your details on the electoral roll after your wedding ~ how easy is that?
🌏 Travelling Overseas? Here’s the Magic Rule
Your passport name and travel bookings must match exactly ~ no taking risks with this.
✨ If you’ve ordered a new passport and updated your name ~ book your tickets in your new name used in the passport.
✨ If you haven’t updated your passport, keep using your old name to book tickets until you do.
Mixing them up can turn your honeymoon flight into a pumpkin ~ so double-check before you click “book.”
🚗 What About My Driver Licence?
You can relax, gorgeous ~ even if you want to start using your new name, you don’t have to update your driver licence straight away.
The same goes for any other ID cards.
Save yourself the admin and just update at the time it expires.
🌸 Adding or Returning to Your Birth Surname
Want to add your birth surname as a middle name?
You’ll need to do an official name change by statutory declaration.
But if you simply want to go back to your original name later on, you can usually just start using it again ~ no forms required.
BUT you can still use your birth surname with your new married name like I do. Sanders is my maiden name and Grubjesic is my married name ~ so for business I use Sanders (it’s less of a tongue twister!) and for personal I use Grubjesic.
📞 Who to Contact for Official Info
For the official word (and legal fine print), your go-to is:
Births, Deaths and Marriages NZ
They’ll help with any extra details, marriage certificate copies, or legal name-change forms if you ever decide to go down that route.
💌 Your Fairy Godmother’s Final Word
However you choose to write your name from here on, it’s a love story that’s all yours ~ whether you keep it classic, double barrell it or create something entirely new.
Arohanui / much love

your Marriage Celebrant + Small Wedding Planner


