How Much to Charge for Wedding Services in 2026 -- The Complete Pricing Guide
You've been in the wedding industry for months (or years). You do great work. Your couples recommend you.
But every time you sit down to put together a quote, the same doubt creeps in: am I charging what I should be?
Charge too little and you burn out working weekends for pennies. Charge too much and couples ghost you after the first email.
This guide gives you the data you need to set your prices with confidence. No opinions. No "what my friend charges." Real market ranges for the US and UK wedding industry in 2026, broken down by service type, experience level, and region.
Before We Look at Numbers: The 3 Golden Rules of Wedding Pricing
1. Your price isn't what your time costs. It's what your result is worth.
A couple isn't paying for 10 hours of photo coverage. They're paying to relive the feeling of their father's embrace every time they open the album. The minute it took you to capture that shot doesn't determine its value.
2. The market sets the floor. You set the ceiling.
The ranges below are guidelines. If your work, your brand, and your client experience are above average, you can (and should) price above these numbers.
3. If nobody ever tells you you're expensive, you're probably too cheap.
Rule of thumb: if you're booking more than 70% of inquiries, you're undercharging. The sweet spot is between 30% and 50% conversion. Below 30%, revisit your value proposition (not necessarily your price).
Wedding Photography
The most in-demand service and the one with the widest price range.
| Level | Price Range | What's Typically Included |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner (0-2 years) | $2,000 - $3,500 | 6-8h coverage, 300-400 edited photos, online gallery |
| Intermediate (2-5 years) | $3,500 - $6,000 | 8-10h, 500-700 photos, gallery + basic album, engagement session |
| Established Pro (5+ years) | $6,000 - $10,000 | Full-day coverage, 700+ photos, premium album, engagement session, second shooter |
| High-End / Destination | $10,000 - $25,000+ | Complete experience, travel included, premium deliverables, cinematic editing |
- Second shooter (+$500 to $1,200)
- Premium album (+$400 to $1,500)
- Engagement session at special location (+$300 to $800)
- Peak season (May-October): +10-20%
Wedding Videography
The service that has grown the most in demand over the last 3 years. Couples in 2026 want video almost as much as photography.
| Level | Price Range | What's Typically Included |
|---|---|---|
| Beginner | $2,500 - $4,500 | 6-8h, 3-5 min highlight reel, digital delivery |
| Intermediate | $4,500 - $8,000 | 8-10h, 5-8 min highlight + full-length film, drone, professional audio |
| Professional | $8,000 - $14,000 | Full-day coverage, cinematic highlight, full ceremony + reception, drone, 2 operators |
| High-End | $14,000 - $30,000+ | Short-film production, 3+ person crew, advanced color grading, fast turnaround |
- Drone footage (+$500 to $1,200)
- Same-day edit for reception screening (+$1,000 to $3,000)
- Second camera operator (+$600 to $1,500)
- Rush delivery (under 2 months): +15-25%
Wedding Planner / Coordination
The sector with the most pricing confusion, because services vary enormously.
| Service Type | Price Range | What's Included |
|---|---|---|
| Day-of Coordination | $1,500 - $3,500 | Pre-event meeting, timeline creation, vendor coordination on the day |
| Partial Planning | $3,500 - $7,000 | Guidance, vendor selection, budget management, coordination |
| Full-Service Planning | $7,000 - $15,000 | Everything from scratch: venue search, all vendors, design, complete coordination |
| Luxury / Destination | $15,000 - $50,000+ | White-glove service, travel, guest management, bespoke design |
- Flat fee by service type (most transparent)
- Percentage of total wedding budget: 10-18% (common for full-service planning)
- Combination: flat base + percentage
DJ and Music
| Level | Price Range | What's Included |
|---|---|---|
| DJ Only | $1,000 - $2,500 | 4-6h set, basic sound equipment |
| Professional Wedding DJ | $2,500 - $5,000 | Ceremony + cocktail + reception, professional sound system, basic lighting, planning meeting |
| DJ + Live Musician (sax/percussion/vocalist) | $4,000 - $8,000 | Live musician during cocktail hour or reception, higher impact |
| Live Band | $6,000 - $18,000+ | 4-8 piece band, custom setlist, own equipment |
- Overtime (+$250 to $500/hour)
- Decorative uplighting (+$500 to $1,500)
- Separate ceremony sound setup (+$300 to $600)
- Karaoke or interactive extras (+$200 to $500)
Floral Design and Decor
| Level | Price Range | What's Typically Included |
|---|---|---|
| Basic | $2,000 - $5,000 | Bridal bouquet, boutonnieres, 8-10 simple centerpieces |
| Intermediate | $5,000 - $12,000 | Bouquet, boutonnieres, ceremony florals, elaborate centerpieces, accent pieces |
| Premium | $12,000 - $25,000 | Full floral design: ceremony arch, large centerpieces, lounge areas, cocktail hour, installations |
| Luxury | $25,000 - $75,000+ | Sculptural installations, imported flowers, complete space design |
- Fresh flowers: 35-45% of price
- Labor and design: 25-35%
- Rental materials (vases, structures): 10-15%
- Transport, setup, and teardown: 10-15%
- Margin: 10-20%
Catering
The vendor with the highest average ticket. Typically 40-50% of the total wedding budget.
| Type | Price Per Person | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Cocktail Reception (no seated meal) | $75 - $150 | 2-3h of passed hors d'oeuvres, bar may be separate |
| Standard Seated Dinner | $150 - $225 | 3 courses + dessert, beverages included, bar separate |
| Premium Seated Dinner | $225 - $350 | 4+ courses, seasonal ingredients, wine pairings, premium open bar |
| Fine Dining | $350 - $600+ | Recognized chef, tasting menu, exclusive ingredients |
- Premium open bar: +$25 to $60 per person
- Late-night snacks (sliders, pizza, tacos): +$15 to $40 per person
- Specialty dietary menus (gluten-free, vegan): usually no extra charge, but confirm
- Dessert bar / cheese station: +$8 to $20 per person
Officiant / Master of Ceremonies
| Type | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Basic Ceremony | $500 - $1,200 |
| Custom Ceremony | $1,200 - $2,500 |
| Ceremony + MC for Reception | $2,000 - $4,500 |
Bridal Hair and Makeup
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Bridal Makeup | $250 - $700 |
| Bridal Hair | $200 - $550 |
| Full Package (makeup + hair) | $400 - $1,200 |
| Trial Session | $100 - $300 |
| Bridesmaids / Family (per person) | $75 - $200 |
Stationery and Graphic Design
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Digital Invitations | $200 - $600 |
| Printed Invitations (100 units) | $500 - $2,000 |
| Full Suite (save the date + invite + menu + seating chart + signage) | $1,200 - $4,000 |
| Custom Luxury Design | $3,500 - $8,000+ |
How to Set YOUR Price: The 4-Pillar Method
Now that you have the market ranges, where do you fit?
Pillar 1: Your Real Costs
Add up EVERYTHING it costs you to work a wedding:
- Equipment (amortized)
- Travel and transportation
- Software and tools
- Insurance
- Hours of work (preparation + wedding day + editing/delivery)
- Taxes and self-employment costs (plan for 25-35% of gross income)
That number is your absolute floor. Never charge below it.
Pillar 2: Your Experience and Portfolio
Be honest:
- Fewer than 20 weddings: you're in the beginner range, and that's perfectly fine. Everyone starts there.
- 20-50 weddings: intermediate range. You have solid judgment and a strong portfolio.
- 50+ weddings: established professional. If you're still charging intermediate rates, you're leaving money on the table.
Pillar 3: Your Market / Region
Working in Manhattan is not the same as working in a small Midwest town. Adjust 15-30% based on your area:
- Premium markets (+20-40%): NYC, LA, San Francisco, Chicago, Miami, London
- Mid-range markets (baseline): Dallas, Denver, Nashville, Atlanta, Seattle
- Budget-conscious markets (-10-20%): Smaller cities, rural areas
Pillar 4: Your Capacity and Demand
If you have 30 Saturdays a year and 25 are already booked, raise your prices. Now.
Simple formula: if you're turning away more than 3 couples a month due to lack of availability, your price is too low.
The 5 Pricing Mistakes That Cost You the Most Money
1. Comparing yourself to the cheapest person in your area. There will always be someone cheaper. Compete on value, not price. 2. Not raising prices every year. Inflation is real. Your costs go up. Your experience improves. Increase by 5-10% each season at minimum. 3. Discounting out of fear. A $300 discount to close a $4,000 booking is 7.5% of your revenue. Multiply that by 20 weddings a year and you've left $6,000 on the table. Over 5 years, that's a car. 4. Not having clear packages. Couples want to choose between 2-3 clear options, not negotiate line by line. Create packages: Good, Better, Best. 5. Undervaluing your own expertise. Your years of experience, the problems you prevent, the moments you anticipate -- that knowledge has a price. Don't treat yourself like a commodity.How to Present Your Prices So Couples Don't Say "That's Too Expensive"
Couples aren't buying a service. They're buying the feeling that their wedding is going to be incredible.
What works:- Present the mid-tier package first (the one you want them to choose). The high-end option makes it look reasonable.
- Include photos or videos of your best work alongside the price. The price justifies itself visually.
- Detail what's included in each package. More detail = more perceived value.
- Add testimonials from couples who chose each tier.
- Send the proposal as a professional PDF, not a text message at 11 PM.
- Sending just a number with no context.
- Apologizing for the price ("I know it's a bit expensive, but..."). Never.
- Offering a discount before they ask for one.
Your Price Reflects How You Value Yourself
At the end of the day, your rate sends a message. A low price says "I'm just starting out" or "I don't trust my own work." A fair price says "I know my worth and I know what you're going to receive."
You don't have to be the most expensive. But don't give away your talent, your experience, and your weekends either.
Review your prices today. Compare them against the ranges in this guide. And if you haven't raised them in over a year, you know what to do.
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