San Francisco City Hall has its own rhythm. The light, the crowds, the quiet pockets and architectural details the building keeps tucked away.
Being familiar with that rhythm is something that only comes with time, and it helps to have someone who knows how to move through the experience with presence and intention.
As a San Francisco wedding photographer, I’ve photographed weddings and portrait sessions here across every format the building offers — civil ceremonies at the top of the grand staircase, private one-hour reservations on the Fourth Floor Gallery, full evening buyouts under the dome, and quiet Wednesday morning portrait sessions when the building is nearly empty and entirely yours.
This guide covers everything you need to know about San Francisco City Hall weddings.

San Francisco City Hall might look nothing like any other government building you’ve been in. The elegant rotunda, the grand staircase, the dome overhead, the light falling through tall windows at different hours of the day — it’s a genuinely extraordinary space, and it has a way of becoming part of your story rather than just the backdrop to it.
What I’ve noticed after photographing here so many times is that couples don’t just choose City Hall for how it looks. They choose it because the building does something to the day. It quiets things down. It brings the focus back to the two people standing at the center of it. The architecture holds the moment in a way that very few spaces can, and it does that whether you have six guests or six hundred.

Before getting into the details, it helps to understand that City Hall serves a few very different kinds of couples. Some come for a civil ceremony with a handful of guests. Some reserve a private space for a more formal gathering. Some come purely for portrait sessions, before or after their wedding day.
Each experience is distinct, and knowing which one fits what you actually want will shape everything else.

Civil ceremonies take place Monday through Friday, accommodate up to six guests including your photographer, and are performed by a Deputy Marriage Commissioner at the top of the grand staircase in the Rotunda.
A few details to keep in mind: the ceremony lasts about two to five minutes, and the space is not roped off. There will likely be other couples getting married immediately before and after you, so these weddings are short and sweet.
You may wish to plan a portrait session either before or after, and if you can, go early. The building on an early weekday morning is a completely different experience from the building at noon.
Getting your marriage license is a separate appointment and a separate process, so be sure to book it on a separate day from your ceremony so you have time to enjoy your day.

For couples who want more guests, a roped-off ceremony space, and the ability to bring their own officiant, the one-hour reservation gives you your own moment inside a building that is still, technically, open to everyone else.
It accommodates up to 100 guests and gives you a choice of ceremony spaces: the Mayor’s Balcony on the third floor or the Fourth Floor Gallery. Both are genuinely beautiful.
The Fourth Floor Gallery is one of the most sought-after spots in the building, with sweeping views down into the Rotunda and a quality of light that photographs beautifully at almost any time of day.
Clare and Matt got married here, and their day is a good example of what this format can hold. The ceremony was formal and full, with guests gathered on the Fourth Floor looking out over the building they’d chosen as the place their story would begin. At the end of the session, Clare changed into a red Chinese dress for portraits through the building.
You can book this option through the City Hall Events Office, and you’ll need to bring your own officiant.


The two-hour reservation offers everything the one-hour does with more time and a larger potential guest count. For couples who want a ceremony that feels more spacious, or who want genuine portrait time built into the same reservation, the extra hour makes a real difference.
This option is worth considering if your guest list is larger, if your ceremony has more moving parts, or if you simply want more time to feel present in your day.

After 5pm on weekdays and on weekends, City Hall can be reserved for a private evening wedding and can accommodate up to 3,000 guests.
Radhika and Vyshakh held their wedding here as a full weekend buyout with a traditional Indian ceremony, and the building absorbed every part of it — the ritual, the color, the scale of the celebration — without losing any of its own character. That’s what this space does when you give it room. It holds whatever you bring without overriding it, and it adds something to your story that no other venue quite replicates.
For pricing and availability on a full buyout, contact the City Hall Events Office directly at sfcityhallevents.org.


Not every visit to City Hall involves a ceremony. Some of the most honest, unhurried work I’ve made in this building has been during portrait sessions for couples who wanted the iconic architecture of City Hall in the background.
Anh and Tuan came for a pre-wedding session, and the building gave them something completely different from anything a garden or outdoor location can offer.
Similarly, Casey and Minh came on a Wednesday morning after their wedding, and we had the building almost entirely to ourselves. That kind of quiet changes what’s possible. Longer moments, more considered frames, the way the architecture frames two people in love.
If you’re considering a portrait session at City Hall, a Wednesday or Thursday morning is your best chance at something that feels genuinely unhurried.
For more photo ideas, you can view my client galleries.


Part of what makes City Hall work so well photographically is that almost every corner of it offers something distinct. These are the spots I return to most consistently, and what each one gives you.
Grand Staircase: The centerpiece of the building and the most iconic shot. The wide marble steps, the ornate railings, and the dome overhead are the image most people picture when they think of City Hall. It’s best in the morning when the light from the upper windows is soft and the crowds haven’t arrived yet.

Rotunda: Standing at the base of the dome and looking up gives you scale and drama that no other spot in the building can match. For portraits, positioning a couple beneath the dome with the full height of the building behind them is one of the most architectural images City Hall offers.

Third Floor Hall Windows: The Art Deco windows on the third floor are one of City Hall’s quieter geometric details. Easy to walk past without noticing, but extraordinary in photographs.

Fourth Floor Gallery: The view from the Fourth Floor looking down into the Rotunda is something you have to see in person to fully appreciate. This is where Clare and Matt chose to get married, and the reason becomes immediately obvious when you’re standing there.

San Francisco City Hall Mayor’s Balcony wedding — the grand staircase in the background, your closest people around you, and nothing between you and the moment. Eddie & Star chose this spot for their ceremony and it delivered.

Back Hallways and Corridors: Some of the most interesting images I’ve taken at City Hall have been in the quieter corridors on the upper floors with their arched windows, long perspectives, and architectural detail that many visitors walk past without noticing. These are the spots that reward a slower pace and a willingness to explore.


Civil ceremony slots book quickly, so know your preferred date and a backup, and be ready to move. You can book through the SF.gov website.
Private events — one-hour, two-hour, and evening buyouts — are booked separately through the City Hall Events Office at sfcityhallevents.org.
Your marriage license must be obtained within 90 days of your ceremony. I recommend scheduling it as its own appointment earlier in the process so you can focus completely on your wedding day.
For more details on getting married in San Francisco, check out this guide from the San Francisco government.

If you want the building at its quietest, Wednesday and Thursday mornings are your best options. The first slot of the day is significantly calmer than anything mid-morning or later. Friday afternoons are typically the busiest time, and summer brings consistent crowds regardless of time. Winter and early spring tend to offer the most space and stillness.
The light inside the building shifts meaningfully throughout the day. Morning light through the upper windows is soft and directional. Late afternoon has a warmth to it that photographs beautifully if you’re in the right part of the building.
If you can walk the space at the same time of day as your planned visit before you commit to a time slot, you may want to. The building looks and feels different depending on when you’re inside it.


This is where having a photographer who knows the building well makes a difference. City Hall has multiple floors, multiple ceremony spaces, and a layout that can feel disorienting on a day when you already have a lot on your mind.
The grand staircase, the Fourth Floor Gallery, the Mayor’s Balcony, the North and South Light Courts — each one has its own character and its own best light, and moving between them efficiently takes knowledge that only comes from time spent there.
My job on a City Hall day isn’t just to take photographs. It’s to know where we’re going next, how long we have, and how to keep the experience feeling present and calm.


I’ve photographed City Hall across civil ceremonies, private reservations, evening buyouts, and portrait sessions at every time of day and every time of year. Every format, every floor, every quality of light.
That knowledge is part of what I bring alongside the photographs themselves, and it’s what allows the day to feel gently guided rather than rushed.
If you’re planning a San Francisco City Hall wedding or portrait session and looking for a photographer to document your day, please reach out.
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