Most couples plan their wedding in terms of events — the ceremony, the reception, the first dance. What they don’t always plan is the connective tissue: how long each transition takes, when to start getting ready, who needs to be where and when.
A realistic timeline is the difference between a day that flows and a day that scrambles.
The Core Principle: Work Backwards From Your Ceremony
Every wedding day timeline starts with the ceremony time and works backwards.
Key calculation: Hair and makeup time × number of people = when to start.
| People getting ready | Approx. time needed (one artist) |
|---|---|
| Bride only | 1.5–2 hrs |
| Bride + 2 bridesmaids | 3–4 hrs |
| Bride + 4 bridesmaids | 5–6 hrs |
| Bride + 6 bridesmaids | 7–8 hrs |
If your ceremony starts at 4pm and you have 4 bridesmaids, hair and makeup starts around 9–10am.
For how long the ceremony itself runs, use the free Wedding Ceremony Length Estimator — this feeds directly into your cocktail hour start time.
Sample Timeline: 4pm Ceremony
| Time | Event |
|---|---|
| 9:00 am | Hair and makeup begins |
| 12:00 pm | Getting-ready photos begin |
| 12:30 pm | First look (if applicable) |
| 1:00–2:30 pm | Wedding party and couple portraits |
| 2:30 pm | Bride to suite for final touch-ups |
| 3:00 pm | Guests arriving; prelude music starts |
| 3:45 pm | Wedding party lines up |
| 4:00 pm | Ceremony begins |
| 4:30 pm | Ceremony ends |
| 4:30–5:30 pm | Cocktail hour; couple finishes portrait session |
| 5:30 pm | Grand entrance and reception |
| 5:45 pm | First dances |
| 6:15 pm | Dinner service |
| 7:00 pm | Toasts |
| 7:30 pm | Cake cutting |
| 8:00–10:00 pm | Dancing and open bar |
| 10:00 pm | Send-off |
Sample Timeline: 6pm Ceremony
| Time | Event |
|---|---|
| 10:00 am | Hair and makeup begins |
| 1:30 pm | Getting-ready photos |
| 2:00 pm | First look (if applicable) |
| 2:30–4:00 pm | Portraits |
| 5:00 pm | Guests arriving |
| 5:45 pm | Wedding party lines up |
| 6:00 pm | Ceremony begins |
| 6:30 pm | Ceremony ends |
| 6:30–7:30 pm | Cocktail hour + golden hour portraits |
| 7:30 pm | Grand entrance |
| 7:45 pm | First dances |
| 8:00 pm | Dinner service |
| 8:45 pm | Toasts |
| 9:15 pm | Cake cutting |
| 9:30–11:00 pm | Dancing |
| 11:00 pm | Send-off |
First Look: Changes Everything
With a first look: All portraits happen before the ceremony. You enter cocktail hour with guests. The ceremony is still emotional — you’re seeing each other in front of everyone who loves you.
Without a first look: The ceremony moment is genuinely the first time. All portraits shift to cocktail hour or after dinner, reducing dance floor time.
Neither is wrong — build your timeline around whichever approach fits you both.
Build Buffer Time In Everywhere
The most common timeline mistake: no buffer.
Add 30 minutes buffer to:
- Getting ready (past your “done by” estimate)
- Between portraits and ceremony start
- Between cocktail hour and dinner
- Between dinner and first dance
A day running 10 minutes behind is fine. A day running 45 minutes behind creates a cascade — vendors waiting, food holding, contracted hours counting down.
Who Gets a Copy of the Timeline
- Day-of coordinator (or whoever is running point)
- Photographer and videographer
- DJ or band
- Caterer and venue manager
- Maid of honor
- Both sets of parents
Share as a Google Doc or PDF the week before. Confirm everyone has read it. At the 2-day-before call with your coordinator, walk through it one final time.
FAQ: Wedding Day Timeline
What time should I start getting ready? Work backwards from your ceremony time. Add total hair + makeup time for your full party, then add a 30-minute buffer.
When should portraits happen? Before the ceremony with a first look, or during cocktail hour. Portraits after dinner eat into dancing time.
How long is a typical reception? 4–5 hours covers dinner, toasts, first dances, cake cutting, and 2+ hours of dancing.
What if we run behind? Tell your coordinator immediately. Shorten the receiving line, start dinner slightly early, or adjust the toast order. Don’t rush photography — it shows in the final images.
Do guests need the full timeline? Share the ceremony time on invitations. Full reception flow goes on your wedding website or in a weekend itinerary for out-of-town guests.
Build It Early, Share It Widely
Lock your timeline 6–8 weeks before the wedding. Share with all vendors at the 2-week mark. Confirm final versions 48 hours before.
Use the Ceremony Length Estimator to get accurate ceremony timing, and see our wedding ceremony order of events guide for the full ceremony sequence.
A WSC membership includes a complete wedding day coordination toolkit — from the getting-ready schedule to end-of-night logistics.