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18 UK Wedding Planning Mistakes Couples Regret

Matt Ward | | 13 min read

Key Takeaways

  • WeddingsHub surveyed 340 recently-married UK couples: 71% identified at least one significant planning mistake they would reverse
  • The most expensive single mistake is booking a non-refundable venue without wedding insurance: average loss £3,200 when this goes wrong
  • Over-inviting is the most common structural mistake: 63% of couples say their final guest list was larger than they intended
  • Failing to brief the photographer on must-have shots is the most-regretted creative decision: 44% of couples wished they had been more specific
  • The average UK couple books their caterer 7 months before the wedding — most independent caterers are already booked for prime dates by this point
  • Inviting a plus-one to the engagement party does not create an obligation to invite them to the wedding in UK etiquette

18 UK Wedding Planning Mistakes Couples Regret (And How to Avoid Them)

Planning a wedding is a 12-18 month process with hundreds of decisions, most of which you have never made before. WeddingsHub surveyed 340 recently-married UK couples in 2025-2026 and asked them to identify the decisions they would reverse. 71% named at least one significant mistake. The same errors appear repeatedly: over-inviting, under-insuring, underbriefing suppliers, and misallocating the budget. This guide documents the 18 most common mistakes and what to do instead.

Key takeaways

  • ✓ 71% of couples identify at least one significant planning mistake after the fact
  • ✓ Over-inviting: affects 63% of couples — start with a firm maximum number
  • ✓ No wedding insurance: average loss £3,200 when this goes wrong
  • ✓ Not briefing the photographer: the most-regretted creative decision (44% of couples)
  • ✓ Booking suppliers too late for peak summer Saturdays: major availability issue
  • ✓ Over-spending on venue, under-spending on food and photography: lowers overall satisfaction

By Matt Ward, Editor at Weddings Hub. Survey data from WeddingsHub post-wedding questionnaire of 340 UK couples who married in 2025-2026. Supplier booking timeline data from WeddingsHub’s UK wedding planner directory.

Mistakes 1-6: The guest list

1. Starting without a firm maximum number

The guest list grows organically if you don’t set a ceiling on day one. Couples who say “we’ll keep it small” without defining what small means end up adding people incrementally until the list is twice what they intended.

What to do instead: Agree a firm maximum (80, 100, 120) before discussing specific names. Decide first whether children are invited. Then draft two lists: a confirmed list and a “if space allows” list. Only invite from the second list if you have firm confirmation from the first list that someone is not attending.

2. Inviting people you feel obligated to invite

WeddingsHub’s survey found that 47% of couples invited at least five guests they did not want at their wedding because of family pressure. The typical cost of an unwanted guest at an average UK wedding (£272 per head) is significant. More importantly: every seat an obligatory guest takes is a seat not available for someone you actually want there.

There is no UK etiquette rule that requires you to invite everyone your parents know. See how to uninvite someone from your wedding for the diplomatic approach when invitations have already gone further than you intended.

3. Giving children an inconsistent policy

Inviting some children and not others creates more conflict than either a fully child-free or fully child-inclusive policy. If you decide on a child-free wedding, apply the rule consistently — no exceptions, including siblings’ children unless you are willing to invite all children.

4. Inviting evening-only guests you don’t actually want

Evening-only invitations are a cost-efficient way to include a wider circle. However, 31% of couples in WeddingsHub’s survey regretted including evening guests who were effectively strangers — colleagues, distant acquaintances — who did not add to the celebration and required food and drink spend.

5. Not confirming plus-ones clearly on invitations

Ambiguity about plus-ones creates awkward phone calls and RSVPs. If a guest is invited with a specific named partner, name the partner on the invitation. If the invitation is individual (single guest only), address it to that person only. Do not use “and guest” unless you genuinely mean “bring anyone.”

6. Failing to set a firm RSVP deadline and enforcing it

Non-responsive guests are a consistent frustration. Set an RSVP deadline of 8-10 weeks before the wedding. If guests have not responded by the deadline, contact them directly. Close the list firmly 6 weeks before the wedding — caterers and venue coordinators need final numbers to confirm seating and catering quantities.

Mistakes 7-10: The budget

7. Over-spending on the venue and underspending on food and photos

The most common budget allocation mistake is spending 40-50% of the total budget on the venue — the space — and too little on the things guests will remember most: food, photography, and music.

WeddingsHub’s recommended allocation:

CategoryRecommended % of total budget
Venue hire25-35%
Catering and bar30-35%
Photography and videography10-15%
Music and entertainment5-10%
Flowers and styling5-8%
Dress, suits, accessories5-8%
Stationery1-2%
Buffer (for overruns)5-8%

8. Not taking out wedding insurance

38% of WeddingsHub-surveyed couples had no wedding insurance when they paid their venue deposit. When something goes wrong — a supplier ceases trading, a key venue burns down, an illness prevents the ceremony — uninsured couples lose an average of £3,200. Wedding insurance typically costs £100-£300 for comprehensive cover.

Take it out the day you pay your first deposit. Read the policy before purchase — ensure it covers supplier insolvency, not just weather and illness. For a full guide, see wedding supplier going bust: how to protect your deposit.

9. Not building a contingency budget

Wedding costs overrun. Not because suppliers are dishonest but because couples add extras as the day approaches — a last-minute upgrade, an additional catering item, unexpected transport costs. Build a contingency of at least 10% of your total budget. If you don’t spend it, it buys the honeymoon upgrade.

10. Booking the cheapest option and then upgrading

Booking the cheapest available DJ, photographer, or caterer with the intention of upgrading later is not a money-saving strategy. Cancellation fees on existing bookings and new booking costs for higher-tier suppliers often cost more than simply booking the right supplier initially. Decide your priorities early and allocate accordingly.

Mistakes 11-14: Supplier management

11. Not booking suppliers early enough for peak dates

For a Saturday wedding in peak season, WeddingsHub’s booking timeline data shows the following average points at which good-quality independent suppliers in popular UK regions become fully booked:

SupplierMonths before date when top suppliers book out
Venue (licensed premises)18-24 months
Wedding photographer15-18 months
Independent caterer14-18 months
Evening band12-15 months
DJ12-14 months
Florist10-12 months
Cake maker8-12 months
Hair and makeup6-9 months

Couples who begin the planning process 12 months before a summer Saturday will face significant availability constraints across most supplier categories. If your wedding is summer 2027, start booking now.

12. Not seeing supplier work in person or speaking to references

Reading reviews is not the same as seeing work in person. For photographers, ask to see a full unedited gallery from a single wedding — not just the 30 best shots. For bands, attend a live performance or ask for a recent live recording. For florists, visit a wedding they are supplying.

References should be recent (within 12 months) and unprompted — ask for a contact from a specific type of wedding similar to yours.

13. Not providing a shot list to the photographer

44% of couples in WeddingsHub’s survey wished they had been more specific about what they wanted photographed. Without a shot list, photographers fill time with what they judge to be good — which may not include specific family combinations, detail shots, or venue elements the couple wanted documented.

Provide: a list of all family group combinations required, a list of guests who must be photographed (elderly relatives, people who have travelled long distances), key detail shots (dress, ring, flowers, venue details), and a note about style (candid vs posed, number of formal groups acceptable).

14. Not hiring a coordinator for the day

Even couples with a venue coordinator discover that they need a separate wedding coordinator on the day. A venue coordinator manages the venue’s staff and timeline. A wedding coordinator manages the couple’s timeline, coordinates between all suppliers, handles problems, and ensures the couple do not spend the day managing logistics.

Month-of coordination (where a coordinator takes over in the final 4-6 weeks and runs the day) costs £800-£1,500 for most UK regions and is the single highest-rated purchase in WeddingsHub’s post-wedding satisfaction data.

Mistakes 15-18: The day itself

15. Not eating on the wedding day

A remarkably common report: couples who are too busy, nervous, or surrounded by guests to eat anything before the wedding breakfast. Given the physical demands of a 10-12 hour day — ceremony, photos, reception, dancing — not eating is a genuine wellbeing risk. Brief a bridesmaid or best man to ensure a quiet moment for both of you to eat something (even a sandwich in the car) before the ceremony.

16. Planning too many formal photos

Formal group photographs take significantly longer than couples expect. Each group change — gathering the right people, positioning, shooting, moving on — takes 5-8 minutes. A list of 20 formal groups takes 1.5-2 hours. That is time when the couple are not with their guests, not eating, and not experiencing their own wedding.

WeddingsHub’s recommended maximum for formal groups: 10-12 combinations. Focus on immediate family and wedding party. Extended family and friend group shots can be more casually captured during the meal.

17. Under-timing the day

A wedding timeline that looks fine on paper will run 20-40 minutes late in practice. Factor in:

  • Guests arriving late for the ceremony
  • A ceremony that runs longer than scheduled
  • Delays between the ceremony and drinks reception
  • Formal photos taking longer than planned
  • A wedding breakfast that runs over

Build 30 minutes of buffer into your timeline at each transition point. Review the timing with your venue coordinator and photographer 4 weeks before the wedding.

18. Forgetting to eat cake, throw the bouquet, or do the things you planned

Couples regularly miss their own planned moments because the day moves fast and no one is responsible for prompting them. Assign someone — the best man, a bridesmaid, the coordinator — to carry a list of the moments you want to happen and to prompt you at each one. Otherwise the day ends and you realise the bouquet was never thrown, the cake was never cut, and the first dance started 45 minutes late.

What to prioritise when you can’t do everything right

If you are reading this with a wedding 6 months away and several of the above already apply:

  1. Take out wedding insurance now — it is never too late until the cancellation date
  2. Set a final RSVP deadline this week and stick to it
  3. Book a month-of coordinator if you don’t have one
  4. Brief your photographer with a shot list — schedule a call or meeting
  5. Check your budget allocation and identify where the gaps are

The five changes above will solve the most financially and emotionally costly mistakes on this list.

FAQ

What is the most common wedding planning mistake in the UK?

Over-inviting is the most common structural mistake: 63% of couples in WeddingsHub’s survey ended up with a larger guest list than intended. The pressure to include every connection inflates the list early. Cutting later is far harder than starting with a firm maximum number.

How far in advance should you book wedding suppliers in the UK?

For a Saturday in peak season (May-September), book the venue 18-24 months ahead, photographer 15-18 months, caterer 14-18 months, band or DJ 12-15 months, and florist 10-12 months. Couples who start later than 12 months out for summer Saturdays face significant availability constraints.

Is not getting wedding insurance a common mistake?

Yes. 38% of UK couples do not take out wedding insurance before paying venue deposits. When suppliers fail, uninsured couples lose an average £3,200. Most wedding insurance policies cost £100-£300 for comprehensive cover and can be taken out at the same time as paying the first deposit.

What do couples most often regret about their wedding photos?

The most-cited photo regrets: not providing a shot list (44%), not booking enough time for couple portraits (38%), not getting a photo with every guest (31%), and not specifying they wanted candid shots rather than posed groups (27%). All are avoidable with a pre-wedding briefing session.

How much should you tell guests on the wedding invitation?

Include: date, venue name and full address, ceremony start time, dress code, RSVP deadline, and contact details for further information. Do not include: dietary options on the main invitation, gift suggestions, or language implying gifts are mandatory.

What is the biggest budget mistake UK couples make?

Spending the majority of the budget on the venue and leaving insufficient money for catering, photography, and entertainment. Couples who spend more than 40% of total budget on venue hire tend to rate food, photography, and entertainment as underdelivering.

Should you hire a wedding planner in the UK?

For weddings over 80 guests or with complex logistics, a professional planner typically saves their fee in supplier negotiation and avoided mistakes. For smaller weddings, a month-of coordinator (£800-£1,500) is often sufficient. Couples who hired a planner were 34% more likely to rate their wedding as stress-free.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most common wedding planning mistake in the UK?

Over-inviting is the most common structural mistake: 63% of couples in WeddingsHub's survey ended up with a larger guest list than they intended. The pressure to include every family connection, work colleague, and childhood friend inflates the list early. Cutting later is far harder than starting with a firm number.

How far in advance should you book wedding suppliers in the UK?

For a Saturday in peak season (May-September), book the venue 18-24 months ahead, the photographer 15-18 months, the caterer 14-18 months, the band or DJ 12-15 months, and the florist 10-12 months. WeddingsHub found that couples who start supplier booking later than 12 months out for summer Saturdays face significant availability constraints.

Is not getting wedding insurance a common mistake?

Yes. WeddingsHub found 38% of UK couples do not take out wedding insurance before paying venue deposits. When suppliers fail (went bust, cancellation, illness), uninsured couples lose an average £3,200. Most wedding insurance policies cost £100-£300 for comprehensive cover and can be taken out at the same time as paying the first deposit.

What do couples most often regret about their wedding photos?

The most-cited photo regrets in WeddingsHub's survey: not providing a shot list (44%), not booking enough time for couple portraits (38%), not getting a photo with every guest (31%), and not specifying that they wanted candid natural shots rather than posed groups (27%). All of these are avoidable with a pre-wedding briefing session with the photographer.

How much should you tell guests on the wedding invitation?

Include: date, venue name and full address (including postcode), ceremony start time, dress code, RSVP deadline, and a website or email address for further information. Do not include: dietary options on the main invitation (handle via RSVP or website), gift suggestions on the formal invitation, and any language that implies gifts are mandatory.

What is the biggest budget mistake UK couples make?

Spending the majority of the budget on the venue and leaving insufficient money for catering, photography, and entertainment. WeddingsHub found that couples who spend more than 40% of their total budget on venue hire tend to rate catering, photography, and evening entertainment as underdelivering. A more even allocation produces higher overall satisfaction.

Should you hire a wedding planner in the UK?

For weddings over 80 guests or with complex logistics (multiple venues, overseas guests, elaborate styling), a professional wedding planner typically saves their fee in supplier negotiation, time, and avoided mistakes. For smaller or simpler weddings, a month-of coordinator (£800-£1,500) is often sufficient. WeddingsHub found couples who hired a planner were 34% more likely to rate their wedding as stress-free.