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Wedding Entertainment Ideas UK 2026: 25 Beyond the DJ

Matt Ward | | 12 min read

Key Takeaways

  • The average UK couple spends £800-£2,500 on entertainment beyond the DJ or band — 12% of total wedding budget
  • WeddingsHub found 73% of UK couples in 2026 are booking at least one entertainment act in addition to their main music supplier
  • Lawn games are now the most-booked non-music entertainment, appearing in 58% of outdoor UK weddings
  • Interactive food stations (oyster shuckers, cheese carvers, cocktail carts) double as entertainment and catering — the most cost-efficient crossover
  • Photo experiences (booth, magic mirror, open-air photo wall) generate the most guest social-media activity
  • Live saxophonists during cocktail hour are the single most-requested add-on for UK couples who already have a DJ

Wedding Entertainment Ideas UK 2026: 25 Options Beyond the DJ

The DJ or band covers the dance floor. But UK weddings run for 8-12 hours, and music alone cannot fill a drinks reception, a long cocktail hour, the gap between dinner and dancing, or the needs of guests who don’t dance. WeddingsHub surveyed 300 UK couples who married in 2025-2026: 73% booked at least one entertainment act beyond their main music supplier. The average spend on non-music entertainment was £1,100. This guide covers 25 options with real costs, what they work for, and what they don’t.

Key takeaways

  • ✓ 73% of UK couples in 2026 book entertainment beyond their DJ or band
  • ✓ Average non-music entertainment spend: £1,100
  • ✓ Lawn games: most-booked non-music entertainment for outdoor weddings
  • ✓ Interactive food stations: entertainment + catering in one
  • ✓ Photo experiences: highest guest social-media activity
  • ✓ Live saxophonist: most-requested add-on for couples who have a DJ

By Matt Ward, Editor at Weddings Hub. Entertainment booking data from WeddingsHub’s survey of 300 UK couples who married in 2025-2026. Pricing from WeddingsHub’s UK wedding entertainment supplier directory, June 2026.

The cocktail hour: 7 entertainment ideas

The drinks reception — usually 60-90 minutes while the couple have photos taken — is the hardest period to fill. Guests have just arrived, don’t know each other well, and are standing rather than seated. Good entertainment here sets the tone for the whole day.

1. Live saxophonist

A saxophonist playing lounge and jazz over a backing track is the most-requested cocktail hour addition for couples who have a DJ for the evening. The music is ambient enough to talk over but live enough to feel special. Cost: £250-£600 for a 60-90 minute set. Book through agencies or direct; check they have public liability insurance.

2. String duo or quartet

A string duo (violin and cello) or quartet is the classic choice for traditional church weddings and formal venues. Also popular for ceremonies and walking-in music. Cost: £400-£900 for 2 hours. Classical, contemporary pop, and film soundtracks are all available from most professional string ensembles.

3. Acoustic guitarist or singer-songwriter

A single acoustic performer creates a relaxed, intimate atmosphere for smaller weddings (under 80 guests) and barn or garden party venues. Can play original material, covers, or a mix. Cost: £300-£600 for 90 minutes. Ask for a playlist and style samples before booking.

4. Roaming magician

Close-up magic performed at table or standing is one of the highest-rated entertainers in WeddingsHub’s guest satisfaction survey. Magicians work the room independently, need no staging or sound, and are effective across all ages. Cost: £400-£700 for 3 hours. WeddingsHub’s directory lists 85 UK wedding magicians with verified bookings.

5. Caricaturist

A caricaturist draws guests during the drinks reception and dinner. Guests take the drawing home — one of the only entertainment options that creates a physical takeaway from the day. Average output: 8-12 drawings per hour. Cost: £350-£600 for 3 hours. Good option for weddings with a range of ages.

6. Living statue or human installation

A trained living statue or theatrical human installation creates a visual centrepiece for arrivals. Works best at grand or unusual venues where theatrical production value is expected. Cost: £350-£600 for 3 hours. Less practical for intimate or relaxed venues.

7. Steel band or calypso duo

For couples with Caribbean heritage or a summer island theme, a steel band playing during the drinks reception creates an immediately festive atmosphere. Cost: £500-£900 for 2-3 hours. Particularly effective for outdoor summer receptions.

The reception: 6 entertainment ideas

The wedding breakfast and evening reception span 4-6 hours. Entertainment here fills the transitions: end of speeches, between courses, and the gap before first dance.

8. Photo booth

A traditional enclosed photo booth with props and printed strips generates consistent engagement from all ages. 4-hour hire typically includes an unlimited-prints package and a digital gallery. Cost: £500-£900 for 4 hours. WeddingsHub found an average 47 uses per 100 guests across a 4-hour booking.

9. Magic mirror

An open-front selfie mirror with animated prompts, digital filters, and printed photo strips. More space-efficient than a traditional booth and works for larger groups. Cost: £450-£800 for 4 hours. Increasingly popular at medium-to-large (100+ guest) weddings.

10. Open-air photo experience (360 booth)

A rotating camera platform films guests on a slow-turn for a shareable video clip. Strong social-media content generator. Cost: £500-£900 for 4 hours. The most current option for tech-engaged younger guest lists.

11. Flower crown or craft station

A DIY flower crown bar or wreath-making station gives guests something to do and creates a photo opportunity. Works best for bohemian, garden party, or outdoor wedding aesthetics. Can be supplied by a florist as an add-on. Cost: £300-£600 for materials and one or two guides.

12. Caricaturist (during dinner)

A caricaturist drawing guests at their tables during the wedding breakfast is a visible, interactive element that fills the sometimes-quiet end-of-meal period. Tables can be visited in sequence. Cost: same as cocktail-hour booking — dual booking often attracts a discount.

13. Wedding band for first half, DJ for second

A live band for the first 90 minutes of evening dancing followed by a DJ for the final 2-3 hours is the format 41% of WeddingsHub’s surveyed couples used. The band creates a live-music moment for the first dance and key songs; the DJ keeps the floor going at a lower cost per hour. Most entertainment agencies offer package pricing for band + DJ combinations.

Lawn games and outdoor entertainment: 6 ideas

Lawn games are now present in 58% of outdoor UK weddings. They work from arrival through to early evening and require no direction, supervision, or infrastructure beyond the set itself.

14. Giant Jenga

The most universally played outdoor game at UK weddings. All ages, no skill required, naturally competitive. Cost: £50-£120 hire per day or weekend.

15. Boules (pétanque)

Boules sets create a relaxed, French countryside atmosphere that suits barn, chateau, and garden party venues. Easy to learn, slow-paced enough for mixed age groups. Cost: £40-£100 hire.

16. Croquet set

Croquet on a lawn is both functional and visually stylish. Works best at country house and garden venues with a formal lawn. Less practical on uneven terrain. Cost: £80-£200 hire for a full-size set.

17. Garden games bundle

Most hire companies offer a bundle of four to six garden games for a single hire fee: Jenga, skittles, ring toss, connect four. Cost: £150-£350 bundle hire including delivery and collection.

18. Outdoor cinema screen

An outdoor cinema setup — projector, screen, bean bags or deck chairs — works best for early-evening midsummer events where sunset is around 9.30-10pm. Film choices can be romantic comedies or a favourite of the couple. Cost: £500-£900 hire including projector and screen. Requires a flat outdoor surface.

19. Lawn bowl and games competitions

Some entertainment suppliers organise structured games tournaments (lawn bowling league, giant noughts and crosses knock-out) with a host who runs the competition throughout the day. Cost: £400-£700 for a games host plus equipment.

Interactive food and drink: 6 ideas

Interactive catering doubles as entertainment. The following options appear in caviar carts and roaming oyster shuckers — the detailed catering guide — but are worth listing here as entertainment additions.

20. Oyster shucker

A live oyster-shucking station with a skilled shucker serving fresh oysters during the cocktail hour or between courses. Visual, interactive, and luxurious. Cost: £500-£900 including oysters and setup for 80-100 guests. Works best at coastal or high-end formal weddings.

21. Cheese carving station

A large whole cheese (typically a 12-18kg cheddar or parmesan) is carved and served at the station. Highly visual and becomes a talking point. Can replace a formal cheese course. Cost: £400-£800 including the cheese and carver for 100-150 guests.

22. Cocktail or mocktail cart

A roaming cocktail cart or trolley manned by a mixologist who makes drinks to order during the drinks reception. Customisable — can serve a signature cocktail created for the couple, classic cocktails, or mocktails for dry weddings. Cost: £450-£900 for 3-4 hours.

23. Chocolate fountain (updated format)

The traditional chocolate fountain has evolved: in 2026 the format is a dark-chocolate fondue station with a broader dipping range (fruit, churros, biscotti, marshmallows, mini doughnuts). Less dated than the original; more dessert-table integrated. Cost: £300-£600 hire plus ingredients.

24. Pizza or pasta live station

A live-action pizza oven station or fresh pasta station where guests watch their food being made is entertainment as much as catering. Cost: highly variable; typically £25-£40 per head for a live cooking station as part of the catering package.

25. Grazing and charcuterie experience

A grazing table or charcuterie board is increasingly styled as an interactive experience — guests build their own plates, the board is replenished throughout the event, and it doubles as centrepiece display. Cost: £12-£22 per head depending on produce quality.

What works when: the entertainment timing map

TimeWhat works best
Arrival and cocktail hour (60-90 min)Lawn games, roaming magician, live acoustic act, caricaturist, cocktail cart
Wedding breakfast (2-3 hours)Caricaturist at tables, interactive food stations, cheese carving
End of breakfast / speechesPhoto booth or magic mirror opens
Early evening (6-8pm)Lawn games continue, outdoor cinema if timing works
First dance and evening receptionBand (first 90 min), DJ (remainder), 360 booth
Late eveningDJ, late-night snacks (pizza van, hot dogs, cheese toasties)

Budget guide: what entertainment costs at each spend level

Total entertainment budgetWhat to book
Under £500Lawn games bundle + roaming magician (cocktail hour only)
£500-£1,000Above + photo booth or magic mirror
£1,000-£2,000Magician + string duo + photo booth + cocktail cart
£2,000-£4,000Live band (cocktail hour + first dances) + DJ + photo booth + lawn games
£4,000+Evening band + DJ + caricaturist + interactive food station + 360 booth

FAQ

Lawn games are the most-booked non-music entertainment for outdoor UK weddings in 2026. For indoor receptions, photo booths and magic mirrors remain the highest-booked interactive entertainment. Live saxophonists or string trios for cocktail hours are the most-requested musical add-ons for couples who have a DJ for the evening.

How much does wedding entertainment cost in the UK?

Wedding entertainment costs range from £150 (basic lawn game hire) to £3,000+ (full evening band). A live saxophonist for cocktail hour: £250-£600. Caricaturist for 3 hours: £350-£600. Photo booth hire: £500-£900 for 4 hours. Lawn game hire: £150-£350.

Do you need entertainment beyond a DJ at a wedding?

No — a great DJ is sufficient for many weddings. Additional entertainment matters most when the cocktail hour runs for 90 minutes or more, when there are guests who don’t drink, or when there are children attending. Entertainment fills the gaps that a DJ alone cannot cover.

What entertainment works for outdoor UK weddings?

Outdoor UK weddings benefit most from lawn games, live acoustic acts, roaming entertainers (magicians, caricaturists), and interactive food stations. Outdoor cinemas work well for midsummer evening events where sunset is late.

What wedding entertainment do guests remember most?

WeddingsHub’s survey of 300 UK wedding guests found interactive food stations and live caricaturists most frequently cited as memorable. Photo experiences generate social-media posts and are remembered because guests take something physical or digital home.

Is a photo booth worth it at a wedding?

For guest-reported fun and social-media activity, photo booths consistently outperform most other entertainment additions. WeddingsHub found photo booth hire generates an average 47 uses per 100 guests across a 4-hour hire. Printed strips that guests take home extend the value beyond the wedding day.

What entertainment works for child guests at a wedding?

For children, face painters are the most-booked specific option (£200-£400 for 2 hours). Lawn games appeal to all ages. A supervised children’s corner with activities works well for guest lists with 10+ children. Some couples hire a professional nanny or children’s entertainer for £250-£450.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most popular wedding entertainment in the UK in 2026?

Lawn games (giant Jenga, croquet, boules) are the most-booked non-music entertainment for outdoor UK weddings in 2026. For indoor receptions, photo booths and magic mirrors remain the highest-booked interactive entertainment. Live saxophonists or string trios for cocktail hours are the most-requested musical add-ons for couples who have a DJ for the evening.

How much does wedding entertainment cost in the UK?

Wedding entertainment costs in the UK range from £150 (basic lawn game hire) to £3,000+ (full evening band). A live saxophonist for cocktail hour: £250-£600. Caricaturist for 3 hours: £350-£600. Photo booth hire: £500-£900 for 4 hours. Lawn game hire: £150-£350. Interactive food stations: £400-£1,200 depending on type.

Do you need entertainment beyond a DJ at a wedding?

No — a great DJ is sufficient for many weddings. Additional entertainment matters most when the cocktail hour or drinks reception runs for 90 minutes or more, when there are guests who don't drink, or when there are children attending. Entertainment fills the gaps between ceremony, drinks, and dinner that a DJ alone cannot cover.

What entertainment works for outdoor UK weddings?

Outdoor UK weddings benefit most from lawn games (sets the casual tone and entertains from arrival), live acoustic acts, roaming entertainers (magicians, caricaturists, living statues), and interactive food stations. Giant screens for live sport (Wimbledon, Euros) can be added for summer 2026 events with appropriate timing.

What wedding entertainment do guests remember most?

WeddingsHub's survey of 300 UK wedding guests found that interactive food stations and live caricaturists were most frequently cited as memorable. Photo experiences (booth, open-air, magic mirror) generate social-media posts and are remembered because guests take something physical or digital home. First dance choreography and surprise performances are cited as emotionally memorable.

Is a photo booth worth it at a wedding?

For guest-reported fun and social-media activity, photo booths consistently outperform most other entertainment additions. WeddingsHub found photo booth hire (£500-£900) generates an average 47 uses per 100 guests across a 4-hour hire. Printed strips that guests take home extend the value beyond the wedding day.

What entertainment works for child guests at a wedding?

For children attending UK weddings, face painters are the most-booked specific option (£200-£400 for 2 hours). Lawn games appeal to children and adults simultaneously. A children's corner with supervised activities works well for guest lists with 10+ children. Some couples hire a professional nanny or children's entertainer (£250-£450 for an evening).