Couple embracing outside San Francisco City Hall in golden light, wedding photography by Matt Dea

City Hall Wedding Photography

San Francisco City Hall Wedding Photographer

City Hall weddings get called the simple option. I have never seen it that way. You chose a Beaux-Arts landmark with a gold dome taller than the Capitol's, and you chose to fill it with just the two of you. That is not simple. That is intentional.

My focus is on couples who want something intimate and real. If a big wedding feels performative to you, this is built for what you actually want.

Starting at $1,800

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You Don't Need to Know What You're Doing.

Most couples who book me have never done a shoot like this. That is not a problem. It is the whole point. I direct every moment, tell you exactly where to stand and how to move, and you end up looking like you have done this a hundred times. All you have to do is show up and trust the process.

Silhouette of couple dancing against arch windows in the 4th floor rotunda at San Francisco City Hall

The Signature Moment

The Rotunda

This is the best light in the building, and it is not close. The 4th floor gallery's arch windows throw soft, directional light across the floor all morning. It is where the session builds toward one frame: the two of you as silhouettes, dancing against the glow.

I photograph this moment while filming it from my own point of view, so you get to watch the exact instant the still was made, then see the still itself. Almost nobody dances on this floor. You will.

Old-Money Paparazzi

The Elevators

Then we break the period drama on purpose. Direct flash, old-money paparazzi style, like the two of you had just been caught leaving somewhere exclusive. Kissing against the gold trim. Twirling. One of you carrying the other out laughing.

These are the frames nobody expects from a courthouse wedding, and they are the ones people stop scrolling for.

Couple kissing in the elevator at San Francisco City Hall, direct flash wedding photography by Matt Dea

What a Session Looks Like

The Full Sequence

Golden hour candid portrait of a couple after their San Francisco City Hall wedding ceremony

Coverage & Investment

Two Hours, Guided

Two-hour City Hall ceremony coverage starts at $1,800. That covers your ceremony, the full building sequence, and time outside for the frames that feel least like a wedding and most like the two of you. Mdeacreative holds dozens of five-star reviews on Google, and the word that comes up most is comfortable.

What's included

Starting at $1,800

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Five-Star Rated on Google

“The photos didn’t just show where we went. They captured who we were in those moments. Joyful, connected, present. Matt’s work brought our memories to life in a way we didn’t expect.”

Sarah A.


“Matt was incredibly thoughtful from start to finish. He guided us in a way that felt completely natural, made us feel at ease, and captured a season of our lives we’ll always want to remember.”

Lisa P.


“Professional, easy going, and genuinely enjoyable to work with. Matt works efficiently without ever feeling rushed. The whole experience was exactly what we hoped for.”

Doug K.


“Matt made the whole process comfortable from the start. Great eye, thoughtful direction, and the final photos came out natural and exactly what we were looking for. Highly recommend.”

Eric C.


Good to Know

San Francisco City Hall Wedding Questions, Answered

Do you need a permit for wedding photos at City Hall?

For a standard session like the one described above, no. City Hall is a public building, and photography accompanying your ceremony does not require a permit. Large productions and reserved spaces, like a private ceremony on the Mayor's Balcony, are booked through the City Hall Events Department, and I can walk you through that if your plans call for it.

How long does a City Hall ceremony take?

The civil ceremony itself runs about five minutes. With check-in at the County Clerk's office and waiting for your time slot, plan on 30 to 60 minutes for the ceremony portion. Two hours of coverage gives us the ceremony plus a full, unhurried portrait session through the building and outside.

What is the best time of day for light at City Hall?

Mornings. The building is quietest right when it opens, and the natural light through the 4th floor windows is at its best before midday. If your ceremony is later in the day, we adapt. The building gives you something different in every hour, and I know where to find it.

Architectural detail inside San Francisco City Hall

Ready to Begin?

See the full story, location by location, in Georgette & Nick's City Hall session.

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