50 Couples Share Their Biggest Wedding Regret — And It's Almost Always the Same Thing
We asked 50 married couples — from newlyweds to couples celebrating 5-year anniversaries — to answer one question: If you could go back and change one thing about your wedding day, what would it be?
The answers clustered around patterns. Some were predictable. One was so universal it became almost statistical. And all of them are completely preventable if you know about them before you're standing in the middle of a wedding day that moves faster than you expect.
The #1 Most Common Wedding Regret
"We didn't hire a videographer."
Thirty-one of the 50 couples mentioned this — in those words, or a version of them. Thirty-one.
"I remember the ceremony in flashes. I cried the whole way through. My husband's vows are a blur. My dad walked me down the aisle and I can't picture it clearly anymore. We have beautiful photos but they don't capture the moment he broke down." — Leah, married 2022
Photography captures what you looked like. Video captures what it sounded like, felt like, and moved like. The decision to skip a videographer almost always comes down to budget. The regret almost always outlasts the budget logic.
If you're choosing between upgrading your florals and hiring a videographer, hire the videographer.
Regret #2: They Didn't Eat
"The catering was outstanding. We heard this from literally every guest. We ate approximately three shrimp cocktails and half a dinner roll."
The couple who doesn't eat at their own wedding is a cliché for a reason — it happens constantly. You're pulled in every direction from the moment cocktail hour begins. By dinner, you're making table rounds, talking to the grandfather who flew in, and accepting hugs from people you haven't seen in years.
Solution: Ask your coordinator or a trusted person to plate your dinner and guard it. Create a 15-minute window during dinner where you and your partner eat together before table rounds begin. Eat a full meal during getting-ready time.
Regret #3: The Guest List Was Too Large
"We had 180 guests. I didn't get to have a real conversation with my best friend the whole night. I barely talked to my own parents."
The irony of the large wedding is that the more people you invite, the less time you have with each of them. A wedding with 80 people where you spend 20 minutes with your best friend feels more intimate than a wedding with 200 where you get 4 minutes with everyone.
The regret almost never goes in the opposite direction — "we wish we'd invited more people" — almost never appears. But "we had to invite people we barely know because of family politics" appears constantly.
Regret #4: They Skipped the Day-Of Coordinator
"I spent the first two hours of my wedding reception putting out fires. The caterer was late. The DJ played the wrong entrance song. I couldn't find the card box. By the time I relaxed it was 9pm."
A day-of coordinator (distinct from a full wedding planner) costs $800–$2,000 and manages everything on the actual day so you don't have to. Vendors call them, not you. Problems get solved without your knowledge. You get to be a guest at your own wedding.
Couples who hired a day-of coordinator almost universally recommend it. Couples who skipped it almost universally regret it.
Regret #5: They Didn't Take a Quiet Moment Together
"From the ceremony to the reception, I didn't have a single private moment with my husband until we got to our hotel at midnight. It felt like our wedding was something that happened around us instead of something we experienced together."
The most consistently practiced piece of advice from couples who loved their wedding day: carve out 20 minutes after the ceremony, just the two of you. No photographer. No family. No coordinator. Just standing somewhere quiet, holding hands, being married.
Most couples skip this because it feels selfish. Every couple who did it says it was the best twenty minutes of the day.
Regret #6: They Let Others Make Too Many Decisions
"My mother-in-law chose the centerpieces. My mother chose the music for the dinner hour. My aunt insisted on the floral arch. By the end of the planning process, the wedding felt like theirs, not ours. The photos are beautiful. It just doesn't feel like us in them."
The wedding industrial complex, family expectations, and the genuine desire to make everyone happy can combine to create a wedding that is technically lovely and personally hollow. Identify the elements that matter most to you — the three or four things that are truly yours — and protect them completely.
Regret #7: They Didn't Put Down Their Phones
"I posted 14 Instagram stories from my own wedding. I watched my ceremony through a screen trying to get the shot. I didn't actually watch my husband's face during the vows."
The unplugged ceremony is having a moment because more and more couples are realizing that the moments you're performing for the camera are the moments you're not actually living. Consider asking guests to put phones away during the ceremony — and consider putting your own down too.
Regret #8: They Rushed the Planning Process
"We were engaged for eight months and planned the whole thing in four. The last three months were chaos. We missed the florist we really wanted because she was already booked. The save-the-dates went out three months before the wedding. People couldn't get the weekend off. Some people just couldn't come."
For a 100+ person wedding, 12–18 months of planning is standard. The most sought-after vendors book 12 months out. A longer engagement isn't indecision — it's access.
The Common Thread in All of These
Every major wedding regret comes from the same place: optimizing for others instead of for yourselves. The guest list that grew because of family politics. The videographer cut to save money that others approved of. The decisions handed over to keep the peace.
The couples who report the fewest regrets are the ones who made conscious choices about their own wedding — even when those choices required difficult conversations.
Your wedding is one day. Make it yours.
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