
Now, move onto the discussing with families: Do you want a venue with outdoor space? Allows outside catering? Traditional wedding hall or non-traditional space? Location: Destination wedding or a local? In Bride’s hometown or where you currently live? As you discuss, think about the factors that come into play with each location. Discuss your desired headcount together first, then bring in the family opinions.

Number of events: Do you want the Big Fat Indian wedding? Or do you want to keep things simple with only one-pre-wedding event? It’s crucial for the couple to get on the same page before you discuss anything with families. Discuss who’s paying for what, are you – the couple – paying for the bulk of the wedding? Do you want to (or have to) pay for the wedding? Or are parents helping out? Don’t assume A-N-Y-T-H-I-N-G – talk about it! Some were too broad, and some were just not relevant.īudget: This one can get complicated. I downloaded five checklists and printed out two, feeling desperate for a checklist. I found some lists I could’ve written before I knew anything about Indian wedding planning. The checklists on the big sites included irrelevant items and then there were the random Indian sites that apparently had checklists. After page 4 of searching through Google results, I stopped looking.

I dug around online for hours trying to find the right Indian wedding planning checklist as if it would appear out of thin air.

Wedding planner checklist free#
We know expenses can add up so we will send you a FREE printed version of the a beautiful checklist and some self care activities. Payal and Rahul are offering a Colour Printed Wedding Planning Checklist posted to you directly.
