A wedding planning checklist helps New Zealand couples organise the full celebration, from budget, guest list and venue to legal paperwork, photography, videography and final details. For Indian, Sri Lankan, fusion or cultural celebrations, early planning for photo and video packages helps protect fast-moving moments that cannot be repeated.
The best checklist starts with your ceremony date, guest count, family priorities and supplier bookings. It then builds a realistic timeline around traditions, travel, outfits, portraits, speeches, dances and reception flow.
Key Takeaways
- Set your budget, guest list and preferred season before viewing venues.
- Book your venue, celebrant, photographer, videographer and caterer early.
- Apply for your New Zealand marriage licence within the correct time frame.
- Share cultural rituals, family photo lists and run sheets before the wedding.
- Add buffer time so small delays do not affect the whole day.
What Should a Wedding Planning Checklist in NZ Include?
Your checklist should include the decisions, deadlines and details that keep the day organised. It should cover practical tasks first, then personal, cultural and family details that shape the wedding timeline.
| Checklist Area | What to Plan | Why It Matters |
| Budget and priorities | Total budget, must-haves, family contributions and spending limits | Helps couples make decisions before booking suppliers |
| Guest list | Guest count, family groups, children, overseas guests and accessibility needs | Affects venue size, catering, seating and transport |
| Venue and ceremony | Ceremony space, reception location, celebrant, licence and wet weather plan | Keeps the legal and location details organised |
| Suppliers | Photographer, videographer, caterer, florist, entertainment, hair, makeup and décor | Secures the people needed to deliver the day smoothly |
| Wedding day timeline | Getting ready, ceremony, portraits, reception, speeches, dancing and farewells | Prevents delays and rushed moments |
| Cultural details | Rituals, family roles, sacred items, outfit changes and multi-day events | Helps suppliers understand what must be captured and respected |
| Final details | Rings, vows, emergency kit, payments, contacts and final timeline | Reduces last-minute stress |
What Do Couples Often Miss in Their Checklist?
Most couples remember flowers, outfits, invitations and styling, but miss timing, transport, family photo lists, meal breaks, ceremony restrictions and supplier communication. These details often decide whether the day feels calm or rushed.
The biggest mistake is not allowing buffer time. A ten-minute delay in hair and makeup can affect first look photos, ceremony seating, family portraits, reception entry and speeches. Couples planning relaxed portraits can get ideas from engagement photos before choosing outfits and locations.
12 to 18 Month Wedding Planning Timeline
Start planning 12 to 18 months before the wedding so you have enough time to secure your preferred venue, celebrant, photographer, videographer and key suppliers. This timeline also gives you space to organise family priorities, cultural details, outfits, travel and the final wedding day schedule without rushing.
12 to 18 Months Before
- Set your budget.
- Draft your guest list.
- Choose your preferred season.
- Shortlist ceremony and reception venues.
- Book your venue, celebrant, photographer and videographer.
- Start discussing cultural or family expectations.
9 to 12 Months Before
- Book catering, entertainment, florist, hair and makeup.
- Plan pre-wedding events if needed.
- Start looking at outfits and jewellery.
- Create a rough photography and videography timeline.
- Reserve guest accommodation if many people are travelling.
6 to 9 Months Before
- Send save-the-dates or invitations.
- Confirm décor, music, transport and ceremony details.
- Build your family photo list.
- Discuss rituals, speeches and reception flow.
- Schedule engagement photos or pre-wedding portraits if included.
3 to 6 Months Before
- Finalise outfits and alterations.
- Confirm the menu.
- Plan seating.
- Review supplier contracts.
- Build your detailed wedding day run sheet.
- Confirm cultural items, family roles and ceremony objects.
Final Month
- Apply for the marriage licence within the correct time frame.
- Confirm final guest numbers.
- Send the timeline to suppliers and key family members.
- Prepare rings, vows, accessories and documents.
- Confirm payment dates and supplier arrival times.
Legal Wedding Tasks in New Zealand
Legal tasks should be added early so the ceremony is valid and the final weeks do not feel rushed. Couples need to confirm their celebrant, marriage licence, ceremony location, witnesses and required documents before the wedding day.
Legal Checklist
- Choose a registered celebrant.
- Confirm your ceremony location.
- Apply for your New Zealand marriage licence.
- Arrange two witnesses.
- Give the required documents to your celebrant.
- Order a marriage certificate after the wedding if needed.
How To Use a Free Wedding Planning Checklist Properly?
A wedding planning checklist is useful when it gives structure, but it should still be customised to your wedding size, culture, venue and family needs. The common mistake is treating a generic template as complete when your celebration includes rituals, travel, outfit changes or several events.
Use a free template, then add:
- Ceremony type and ritual order.
- Family members needed for formal portraits.
- Supplier arrival and pack-down times.
- Travel time between locations.
- Backup plans for weather or delays.
- Delivery expectations for photos, teasers and films.
Expert best practice: give your photo and video team a family photo list with names, not just labels. “Couple with aunties” can be unclear, while named relatives are easier to gather when everyone is moving quickly.
Small Weddings Planning Checklist
A simple wedding planning checklist works well for small weddings because there are usually fewer guests, suppliers and moving parts. Even so, couples should still plan the legal tasks, ceremony timing, family photos, food service, supplier contacts and wet weather option.
For a small wedding, prioritise:
- Marriage licence and celebrant details
- Guest seating, shade and accessibility
- A short family photo list
- Couple portraits during the best light
- Food and drink timing
- Supplier arrival times and contacts
- Wet weather plan for outdoor ceremonies
- One trusted person to handle small questions on the day
A small wedding planning checklist can feel more relaxed, but they still need a clear timeline. For outdoor portraits, Auckland locations can help couples choose the right scenery, light and travel timing.
Plan the Day With More Calm, Meaning and Confidence
A wedding planning checklist helps you organise the wedding, but the right photo and video team helps preserve the moments that make it meaningful. For cultural and multi-day weddings, this is especially important because rituals, blessings, speeches, performances and farewells often happen quickly.
Lionbeats supports New Zealand couples with wedding photography and videography for Indian, Sri Lankan, fusion and cultural celebrations. Contact us by calling +64 21 213 5288 or emailing contact@lionbeats.co.nz to discuss your date, events and wedding coverage needs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a checklist enough to plan the whole wedding?
A checklist gives structure but does not replace supplier conversations, cultural planning or a detailed timeline, so use it for decisions, deadlines and wedding day timing, then call +64 21 213 5288 if you need help matching coverage to your schedule.
Does a wedding planning checklist need to include photography and videography?
Yes, photo and video should be included early because coverage affects your timeline, supplier count and final memories, so choose your style, confirm hours, list family photos and email contact@lionbeats.co.nz for guidance.
Can I plan a wedding in New Zealand in six months?
Yes, you can plan a wedding in New Zealand in six months if you are flexible with dates, guest count and suppliers, but prioritise the venue, celebrant, licence, photography, videography, catering and outfits first.
Is a simple checklist better for a small wedding?
Yes, a simple checklist often works better for a small wedding because it keeps attention on the ceremony, guests and meaningful details, but it should still include timing, legal tasks, family photos, food and wet weather plans.
Can we use the same checklist for a cultural or multi-day wedding?
No, a standard checklist needs extra sections for cultural or multi-day weddings, so add each event separately with rituals, outfits, family groups, meals, travel, supplier hours and delivery expectations.


