10 Tips for Choosing Wedding Vendors
Planning a wedding involves countless decisions, with choosing the right vendors being one of the most crucial. This article presents expert-backed tips to help couples select the perfect team for their special day. From assessing experience and personality to ensuring alignment with your vision, these insights will guide you through the vendor selection process with confidence.
- Meet Vendors in Person for Emotional Connection
- Prioritize Experience and Personality in Vendors
- Seek Vendors Who Understand Your Vision
- Choose High-Touch Vendors with Compatible Personalities
- Involve Both Partners in Vendor Decisions
- Select Vendors Who Can Handle Unexpected Situations
- Find Vendors Aligned with Your Desired Experience
- Look for Systematic Approaches in Vendors
- Bring Visual Aids to Vendor Meetings
- Observe Vendors in Action Before Deciding
Meet Vendors in Person for Emotional Connection
If you are in the process of choosing your wedding vendors, make sure to meet them in person or, at the very least, over a proper video call. Weddings are emotionally laden, time-bound, and need constant coordination. When a vendor is not communicative or present at that initial meeting, it tends to cause a lot of problems either in the planning process or on the actual day. Conversely, when someone listens without interrupting or when he or she lights up at hearing your story, that is an indication of how they will react in the future when things become difficult. I have experienced couples who returned to tell me that they clicked with the vendors they met at that initial meeting, and it was those vendors who got them through the stressful moments. That connection provided them with a sense of security, which no package can guarantee.
Nicole Robins
Wedding Planner, Ever After Weddings
Prioritize Experience and Personality in Vendors
As a wedding photographer of 15 years, I always tell couples this: experience matters more for weddings than nearly any other kind of event. You’re not just hiring a vendor—you’re trusting someone with one of the most emotionally charged, fast-paced days of your life.
Beyond technical skills or pretty portfolios, couples should prioritize personality and emotional compatibility. You’ll spend more time with some of your vendors—like your photographer—than your own family on the wedding day. If their energy doesn’t calm you or align with yours, even the best photos won’t erase the stress of a tense experience.
When I chose vendors for my own events, I looked for professionals who not only had a proven track record but made me feel at ease, listened carefully, and clearly loved what they did. Passion and professionalism together are what make your day smooth—and truly unforgettable.
Travis Borkenhagen
Wedding Photographer, Lovelee Photography
Seek Vendors Who Understand Your Vision
Choosing your wedding vendors is about more than just finding someone with a good portfolio; it’s about finding people you genuinely trust. The best experiences come when you feel seen, understood, and taken care of by your vendor team. When we guide our elopement clients through the process of choosing vendors, we always emphasize the importance of prioritizing connection. Do they communicate clearly? Do they take time to understand your vision? Do they make you feel comfortable? That’s just as important as skill or pricing, maybe even more so.
For our own work, we partner with vendors who share our values of care, creativity, and calm. We’ve been in this industry for a while, and we can say with confidence: the most memorable wedding days are the ones where every vendor shows up with intention and heart, not just treating it as a job to do.
Brian Holstein
Photographer & Business Owner, Scenic Vows
Choose High-Touch Vendors with Compatible Personalities
For vendors you spend all day with—photographer, videographer, planner, DJ/band—make sure that you like their personality in addition to their work.
If you only look at their portfolio without making sure you feel comfortable with such high-touch vendors, you run the risk of spending one of the most important days of your life with someone you don’t really like—what a waste! You deserve to be fully present throughout the day, savoring each moment. If someone pulls your attention away from the celebration, they aren’t the vendor for you.
Christine Murphy
Wedding Photographer, Christine Hazel Photography
Involve Both Partners in Vendor Decisions
After 23 years of running a custom cabinetry business and working with hundreds of couples on their dream homes, I’ve learned that the vendor selection process reveals everything about how you’ll handle major decisions as a married couple. The biggest mistake I see is when one partner dominates the decision-making while the other checks out completely.
My advice: Choose vendors who require both of you to be present for key discussions. When couples come to us for kitchen renovations, I insist on having both partners involved in design meetings because the person who cooks daily might have completely different priorities than the one who just wants it to look good. I’ve seen too many $50,000 kitchen projects become sources of resentment when only one voice was heard.
The selection process should be about finding vendors who ask the right questions upfront. When we meet new clients, I always ask: “What does your ideal Sunday morning look like in this space?” The couples who can answer that together, building on each other’s ideas, are the ones who end up happiest with their investment. The ones who can’t usually struggle with the entire project timeline.
Most importantly, avoid any vendor who won’t give you written contracts with fixed pricing. I’ve watched wedding vendor horror stories destroy couples’ trust in each other when surprise costs appear weeks before the big day. A reliable vendor will be happy to commit everything to paper because they’ve already thought through potential issues and solutions.
Brent Goschnick
Director, G&M Craftsman Cabinets
Select Vendors Who Can Handle Unexpected Situations
Running a mobile IV therapy business means I work with couples during their most stressful moments – right before weddings when they’re dehydrated, exhausted, and overwhelmed. I’ve treated hundreds of bridal parties across Colorado, and the pattern is always the same: couples who chose vendors based on flexibility and problem-solving ability had far less stress.
My selection process focuses on one key factor: does this vendor adapt to unexpected situations? When I’m treating a bride at 6 AM because she got food poisoning the night before, or when a groom needs IV therapy after his bachelor party went awry, flexibility saves the day. The best wedding vendors I work alongside are the ones who accommodate altitude sickness, weather changes, and last-minute venue switches without charging extra fees or creating drama.
I always tell couples to ask potential vendors this specific question: “What happens if something goes wrong the day before or day of?” The vendors worth hiring will have detailed backup plans and won’t make you feel like you’re asking for a favor. In Colorado’s unpredictable mountain weather, I’ve seen photographers, caterers, and planners either step up with solutions or completely fall apart under pressure.
Test your vendors’ communication style during crunch time, not just during the initial honeymoon phase. Send them a slightly complicated request via text at 7 PM on a Tuesday – their response time and attitude will tell you everything about how they’ll handle your actual wedding day emergencies.
Joseph Lopez PIVC
Owner, Pure IV Colorado
Find Vendors Aligned with Your Desired Experience
It’s easy to get distracted by trends or price points, but it’s important to find vendors who align with the kind of experience you want to create. For me, the selection process was about looking for vendors who were not only skilled at their craft but also passionate about creating unique, memorable experiences. I focused on vendors who had experience with destination weddings, as they understand the logistics and nuances involved. Ultimately, the most important factors were their professionalism, creativity, and ability to collaborate to ensure the day was flawless and personalized to our needs.
Sendy Raymond
Owner & Managing Director, Your Bali Wedding
Look for Systematic Approaches in Vendors
While I manage marketing for multifamily properties rather than weddings, I have negotiated hundreds of vendor contracts worth millions, and the principles are identical. The biggest mistake couples make is choosing vendors based on portfolio alone instead of their systematic approach to delivering results.
When I negotiate with creative vendors for construction banners and permanent signage, I always ask to see their project management documentation and timeline processes. The vendors who can show me detailed workflows and contingency plans consistently deliver 40% better results than those who just show pretty pictures. For weddings, ask potential vendors to walk you through their backup plans and day-of coordination systems – not just their Instagram feed.
My breakthrough came when I started requiring vendors to provide specific performance metrics from past projects. The DJ who can tell you exactly how they’ve handled equipment failures, or the photographer who tracks their shot delivery timelines, will outperform the “creative” who just talks about their artistic vision. I’ve seen this principle increase our project success rates by 25% across our entire portfolio.
The vendors worth hiring are those who treat your event like a business operation, not just an artistic expression. They should have systems, backup plans, and measurable processes – just like any other professional service you’d hire.
Gunnar Blakeway-Walen TWA
Marketing Manager, The Winnie Apartments by Flats
Bring Visual Aids to Vendor Meetings
As someone who stages homes for a living, I know how important it is to find vendors whose aesthetic vision aligns with yours. I always suggest collecting inspiration photos and asking vendors to explain how they’d execute your vision. When I planned my own wedding last year, I brought paint swatches and fabric samples to every vendor meeting to ensure everyone understood exactly what I was looking for. The vendors who took the time to discuss these details and offer creative solutions within my budget were the ones who delivered the best results.
Brandi Simon
Owner, TX Home Buying Pros
Observe Vendors in Action Before Deciding
Being in the restaurant industry, I’ve learned that reading genuine reviews and actually visiting vendors in person reveals so much more than just looking at their websites and social media. When we selected our wedding caterer last year, we made surprise visits during their actual events to see how they handled real-world pressure and treated their clients in action.
Allen Kou
Owner and Operator, Zinfandel Grille