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Family law weekly highlights—England and Wales: weddings law reform, QLR conflict ruling, London PLO update, HMCTS filing changes, disabled children care review, key children, financial remedies and international cases

Published on: 09 October 2025

Published by a LexisNexis Family expert
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In this issue:

  • Practice and procedure
  • Public children
  • Private children
  • Financial provision
  • International children
  • Daily and weekly news alerts
  • New content
  • Updated content
  • New Q&As
  • Useful information

Practice and procedure

Reform to weddings law following Law Commission recommendations

The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) has set out proposals to overhaul weddings law in England and Wales, aiming for a more adaptable legal framework that gives couples greater freedom over the setting and form of their ceremony. Rather than controlling approved buildings, the revised model would regulate the officiants who preside over marriages. The programme stems from the Law Commission’s final report of 19 July 2022, which urged modernisation so the law mirrors the varied ways people choose to wed. Under the plans, ceremonies would no longer be confined to limited categories of venues. Couples could instead marry in a much wider array of places, so long as specified requirements are satisfied. The package also features steps to streamline recognition for faith communities whose rites are not presently acknowledged by the marriage legislation. Applicable standards would still apply, ensuring validity, while easing routes to recognition for groups presently excluded from recognition...

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