Union County Probate Court

210 West Main Street, Union, South Carolina, 29379

★★★★3.7(3)
Union County Probate Court in Union, South Carolina

Contact & location

Address
210 West Main Street, Union, South Carolina, 29379
Records for
Union County, South Carolina
See all probate offices in South Carolina

Last verified July 14, 2026

This office issues South Carolina state records

Union County follows South Carolina’s fees, eligibility rules and processing times. Compare the statewide baseline below before choosing where to go.

$12.00
South Carolina marriage certificate fee
4–6 weeks
Statewide processing
5,478,831
South Carolina population

This office charges $5.50 $6.50 less than the South Carolina fee.

See full South Carolina requirements, IDs & fees →

Office hours

Monday9:00am - 5:00pm
Tuesday9:00am - 5:00pm
Wednesday9:00am - 5:00pm
Thursday9:00am - 5:00pm
Friday9:00am - 5:00pm
Saturdayclosed
Sundayclosed

Certificates, fees & processing

RecordFeeProcessing
Marriage Certificate$5.504–6 weeksSouth Carolina estimate

Processing times are set at state level — county offices do not publish their own — and are estimates that vary with demand.

The Union County Probate Court’s office or registry of vital records, offers a wide range of crucial services. These offices play a vital role in the protection and provision of essential documents such as , and marriage certificates . In addition to maintaining these primary records, they are responsible for managing and issuing copies of birth, marriage, and death records that occurred within the Township of Union. Alongside record maintenance, this office provides valuable services like issuing certified copies of documents, overseeing the registration of domestic partnerships, and offering assistance to rectify any errors detected in vital records. Through these comprehensive services, the vital records office ensures the accuracy, accessibility, and integrity of vital records for the benefit of the community.

Reviews

★★★★3.7 (3)
  • ★★★★★Alan BassGoogle

    During a recent interaction, Union County Probate Judge Toni Allen was extremely helpful, extremely courteous, and extremely kind. I could not be more pleased.

  • ★★★★Dianne MartinGoogle

    One of my long time clients asked that I prepare necessary documents so she could close her husband's estate. No official inventory and appraisement form had been filed. I prepared for my client an official inventory/appraisement along with a waiver of filing requirements (no need in SC for an accounting if she is the personal representative of the Estate and also the sole beneficiary). The court clerk advised my client that the value I assigned to the home was incorrect at the amount I found comparable property selling for but insisted the court had to use the "Q Public" value from the auditor's records. While I can understand the Probate court not accepting an appraisal less than "Q Public" records, I fail to understand their reasoning in accepting true fair market value at date of death. How much is the court losing in administrative fees due to their lack of understanding what should be on this one little form? The client called me back after leaving the probate office and told me she was told she could only sell the house for what was listed or she would have taxes to pay.... are you kidding me? The court clerks surely should not be giving tax advice.

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