Best Time to Get Married at San Francisco City Hall (and Why It Matters)
If you’re planning a San Francisco City Hall wedding, choosing the best time to get married is one of the most important decisions you’ll make. The time of day affects everything — from lighting and photography to crowd levels and overall experience. In this guide, we’ll break down the best times to get married at SF City Hall, including early morning, midday, and late afternoon, so you can choose a timeline that fits your vision and creates the kind of wedding day you’ll want to remember forever.
🌤️ Early Morning (8:00 AM – 10:00 AM)
A moment to slow down and take it in.
Quiet, romantic, and the best access to everything
If you want your City Hall wedding to feel:
calm
intentional
almost like you have the building to yourself
the morning is your time.
The earlist ceremony starts at 9:00 AM, but I always recommend arriving at 8:00 AM sharp (or even a few minutes earlier) to begin capturing your couple’s photos. Why? That first hour is magic.
Why it works so well:
You’ll be among the first people in the building and won’t have to wait to take photos on the grand staircase
Light is soft, directional, and clean
The building is quiet and calm
You’re not competing with crowds for every photo
What your timeline can include:
First look (super intimate in an empty building)
Grand staircase portraits (without people in the background)
1–2 additional locations before your 9am ceremony
A relaxed, unrushed ceremony experience
👉 If your goal is editorial, elevated, cinematic photos, this is the best time.
☀️ Midday (11:00 AM – 2:00 PM)
Busy, bright, and fast-paced
Midday is when City Hall is at its peak. This doesn’t mean it’s bad — it just means your experience will be different.
What to expect:
More light coming into the building
More couples getting married
More tourists walking through
More competition for photo locations
What still works:
The light is still beautiful and it even gets more dynamic (though some sides of the building will be better than others due to lighting)
The energy feels lively and celebratory
Getting to City Hall may be easier (non-commute times)
You don’t have to wake up super early
What to adjust:
Build in a bit of buffer time in case you need to wait
Expect to pivot quickly
Bring some water and snacks. The building warms up and you may need to hydrate and replenish your energy.
👉 Midday works best for couples who find it difficult to arrange an early morning wedding.
🌇 Late Afternoon (2:00 PM – Close)
Dramatic light + surprisingly quiet moments
This is the most underrated time at City Hall. As the day winds down:
crowds thin out
energy slows
light becomes moodier
And then something really special happens…
The last 30–45 minutes before closing:
This is where City Hall starts to feel almost empty again.
Why it’s incredible:
You get breathing room back
You can revisit key locations with fewer people
Light gets more cinematic and moody
It feels like the building is yours again
Perfect for:
Couples who want a slightly more dramatic, moody, editorial vibe
People who don’t mind a little earlier crowd in exchange for a quieter ending
⏰ So… What Time Should You Choose?
It really comes down to how you want your day to feel.
Choose early morning if you want:
editorial, clean photos
calm, quiet energy
the best access to locations
the most flexibility
editorial, clean photos
Choose midday if you want:
lively, brighter photos
a more spontaneous experience
flexibility with timing
Choose late afternoon if you want:
a more cinematic feel
dramatic lighting
✨ Final Thoughts
City Hall weddings are often chosen because they’re affordable, simple, and flexible. But simple does not mean small.
With the right timing, your day can feel:
expansive
intentional
full of movement and meaning
Your wedding isn’t defined by how many people are there.
It’s defined by:
how you move through the day
what moments you create
and how much space you give yourself to actually experience it
If you’re planning a City Hall wedding, pick a time that supports:
the experience you want
the photos you want
and how you want to feel when you look back on it
Planning Your San Francisco City Hall Wedding?
If you’re planning a City Hall wedding and want help mapping out your timeline, choosing the best photo locations, and creating a day that feels full, intentional, and completely you — I’d love to help.