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Planning a weekend wedding in the UK, the full guide
By Shortlist Wedding editorial team

Planning a weekend wedding in the UK, the full guide

A single day can feel fleeting. After months, sometimes years, of planning, the wedding day itself passes in a blur of moments. This is why more couples are choosing to extend the celebration, turning their wedding into a weekend-long experience. It is a chance to slow down, to spend meaningful time with the people who have travelled to be with you, and to create a series of memories rather than a single one.

A weekend wedding transforms the event from a formal occasion into a relaxed mini-break centred around your marriage. It allows for different tones and textures: a casual welcome dinner on Friday, the romance and formality of the ceremony on Saturday, and a laid-back farewell brunch on Sunday. This approach gives you and your guests the one thing a traditional wedding cannot: the luxury of time.

Why Choose a Weekend Wedding?

The primary appeal of a weekend wedding is the opportunity for genuine connection. When guests travel from across the country or overseas, a few hours at a reception is hardly enough time to catch up. A two or three day event allows for relaxed conversations over a welcome drink or a morning coffee. It removes the pressure of having to speak to everyone in one evening and fosters a warm, communal atmosphere.

This extended format also allows your celebration to unfold at a more natural pace. There is no rush to fit everything into a tight, six-hour window. You can design a schedule that feels comfortable, with built-in downtime for guests to explore the venue's grounds or the local area. This creates a far more enjoyable experience for everyone involved, including you. The wedding becomes less of a performance and more of a shared holiday.

The Financial Reality of a Two Day Celebration

Extending your wedding over a weekend is a significant financial decision. The budget needs to account for multiple events, longer venue hire, and additional supplier costs. It is important to be clear-eyed about the investment from the start. For a 2026 wedding with 80 guests, an exclusive-use venue in a popular region like the Cotswolds or Surrey will form the largest part of your spend.

Here is a sample cost breakdown to give you a clearer picture of where the money goes. These figures are estimates and will vary based on your specific location, guest count, and choices.

  • Exclusive Venue Hire (2 nights): £15,000 - £25,000
  • Catering (80 guests): £16,000 - £22,000 (Includes a welcome BBQ at £60/head, wedding breakfast at £120/head, and Sunday brunch at £40/head)
  • Drinks Package: £7,000 - £10,000 (Covers welcome drinks, wine with dinner, toast, and a limited bar for two evenings)
  • Planner (Weekend Coordination): £5,000 - £8,000
  • Entertainment (Two events): £2,500 - £5,000 (e.g., acoustic set for Friday, DJ for Saturday)
  • Additional Staffing: £1,000 - £2,000 (For setup, service, and breakdown over multiple days)
  • Stationery Suite: £1,000 - £2,000 (Save the dates, invitations with weekend details, on-the-day items)

While the total cost is higher than a single-day wedding, the value is spread across a longer period. You are not just paying for a party; you are investing in a 48-hour experience for your closest friends and family.

Finding the Perfect Venue for a Weekend Takeover

The right venue is the foundation of a successful weekend wedding. The most important factor is securing 'exclusive use'. This means the entire property is yours for the duration, ensuring privacy and the freedom to create your own world. You will not be sharing the space with other hotel guests or another wedding party, which is essential for maintaining an intimate atmosphere.

Look for venues with on-site accommodation for at least your immediate family and wedding party. This simplifies logistics and makes the entire weekend feel more cohesive. Properties with varied spaces are ideal. You might want a rustic barn for a Friday night dinner, elegant formal gardens for a Saturday drinks reception, and a light-filled orangery for a Sunday brunch. Consider regions known for their beautiful destination venues. Places like Wilderness Reserve in Suffolk offer private houses and cottages, while Scottish castles like Drumtochty provide a dramatic and secluded backdrop. In the south, venues like Euridge Manor in the Cotswolds offer sprawling, magical grounds perfect for a multi-day event. Book well in advance, as the best exclusive-use venues are often reserved 18 to 24 months ahead.

A Step-by-Step Timeline for Planning

Organising a weekend wedding requires careful project management. The extended timeline and multiple moving parts mean that a structured approach is critical. Following a clear schedule will keep the process manageable and ensure nothing is overlooked.

  1. Define Your Vision & Budget (24 months out): Before you look at a single venue, decide on the overall feeling of your weekend. Is it a relaxed, festival-style gathering or a formal, black-tie country house affair? At the same time, establish a firm budget. This will guide every subsequent decision.
  1. Book Your Key Suppliers (18-22 months out): Your first bookings should be the 'big three': the venue, your wedding planner, and your photographer. A planner with specific experience in weekend weddings is invaluable for managing the complex logistics.
  1. Send Save the Dates (12-14 months out): Give your guests plenty of notice. A weekend event requires them to arrange travel, book accommodation, and take time off work. Be clear on the save the date that it is a weekend-long celebration.
  1. Outline the Itinerary (10 months out): Map out the flow of the weekend. A common structure is a Friday welcome dinner, the main wedding on Saturday, and a farewell brunch on Sunday. Crucially, schedule downtime for guests.
  1. Hire Remaining Vendors (8-10 months out): Book your caterer, florist, entertainment, and any other suppliers. Ensure they are aware of the multi-day schedule and confirm their costs for the extended service.
  1. Design the Invitation Suite (6-8 months out): Your invitations need to be very clear. Include a schedule of events, dress codes for each, accommodation information, and details for how to RSVP to each part of the weekend.
  1. Manage Guest Accommodation (6 months out): If your venue does not have enough rooms for everyone, research local hotels. Try to arrange a block booking with a discounted rate and share these details with your guests.
  1. Finalise the Details (2-3 months out): Confirm menus with your caterer, create music playlists for each event, and plan the contents of your welcome bags. Arrange any necessary transport, like a shuttle bus from a nearby hotel to the venue.
  1. Create a Master Schedule (1 month out): Develop a detailed document for your suppliers and wedding party that outlines the plan for the entire weekend, from the first vendor arrival to the final guest departure.
  1. Be Present (The Weekend): You have done the work. Delegate all on-the-day coordination to your planner or a trusted member of your wedding party. Your job is to host, celebrate, and enjoy every moment.

Curating the Guest Experience

A weekend wedding is as much about your guests' enjoyment as it is about your own. Making them feel welcomed and cared for from the moment they arrive is what turns a good wedding into a great one. Thoughtful details and clear communication are the cornerstones of excellent hosting.

A dedicated wedding website is almost essential. It acts as a central hub for all information: the weekend's itinerary, travel advice, accommodation options, dress codes, and a guide to the local area. This prevents you from having to answer the same questions repeatedly. Upon arrival, a welcome bag is a warm gesture. It need not be extravagant; a bottle of water, a local snack, a printed itinerary, and a handwritten note will make your guests feel instantly at home.

The most important element of the guest experience is the pacing. It is tempting to fill every moment with an activity, but this can be exhausting. Build in periods of downtime. Allow for a slow morning on Sunday before brunch. Give guests a few hours on Saturday afternoon to relax or explore. The goal is a relaxed house party atmosphere, not a rigid boot camp. A well-paced weekend leaves guests feeling refreshed and connected, not simply tired.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Do we have to pay for our guests' accommodation? A: It is not expected for you to cover guest accommodation for the entire weekend. The standard etiquette is for guests to pay for their own rooms. You can assist by block-booking rooms at a nearby hotel to secure a better rate. You might choose to cover the cost for your parents and the wedding party as a gesture.

Q: How do we manage RSVPs for multiple events? A: Your invitation should allow guests to RSVP for each event separately. For example, have checkboxes for the "Friday Welcome Dinner", "Saturday Ceremony & Reception", and "Sunday Farewell Brunch". A wedding website with a digital RSVP form is the most efficient way to track responses for each part of the weekend.

Q: What's a realistic budget for a UK weekend wedding? A: For a 2026 wedding with 80 guests at an exclusive-use country house, a realistic starting budget is £40,000 to £50,000. This can be done for less, perhaps closer to £30,000, if you choose a 'dry-hire' venue where you bring in all your own suppliers, but the logistical work will be greater.

Q: How do we keep the weekend from feeling too long? A: Create a distinct identity for each event. A casual Friday with street food and a playlist is very different from a formal Saturday with a string quartet and a seated dinner. More importantly, schedule downtime. An unstructured afternoon allows guests to recharge and makes the planned events feel more special.

Q: Is a wedding planner necessary for a weekend wedding? A: While you can plan it yourself, a professional planner is highly recommended. The logistics of a multi-day event, including staggered vendor arrivals, guest management, and troubleshooting over 48 hours, are far more complex than for a single-day wedding. Their experience can be invaluable.

Planning a celebration of this scale starts with finding the right setting and the right team. The shortlist.wedding directory features exclusive-use venues across the UK and Europe and planners who specialise in creating extraordinary multi-day events.

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