Wedding planning, tailored to your city
Choose your country and city to see local vendors, average budgets and planning tips.
Why the city matters
Every wedding has a local context. Typical budgets change a lot between cities — getting married in New York doesn't cost the same as in Charleston, nor London versus Bath. Ideal months depend on local climate. The vendors you know via word-of-mouth only cover your area.
That's why Planivia works city by city. When you pick your destination, the budget calculator uses real local wedding market ranges, the checklist adapts to country customs, and the vendor search filters by radius from your venue. If you're getting married away from where you live, double win: we show you destination vendors, not your hometown ones.
Below you'll find the full list of cities we cover, grouped by country. Each city has its own page with a local guide, specific FAQs, typical budget and the main services (guest management, seating plan, wedding website, plan a wedding). Start by picking yours — free up to 80 guests, no card.
Destination weddings deserve a special mention. About one in five couples planning with us is getting married outside the city where they live — sometimes outside their country. That changes everything: you can't visit the venue every weekend, your guests need clear travel logistics, and the vendors you'll meet are people you've never worked with before. Our city pages are built precisely for that scenario: they show the venues that actually rank in that destination, the average prices a local couple would pay (so you don't get the tourist mark-up), and the FAQs that come up most often when planning remotely.
What changes most between countries isn't the dress or the cake — it's the legal layer and the vendor mix. Civil ceremony requirements vary wildly: in Spain you need to file paperwork months ahead at the registry office, in the UK you book the registrar through your local council, in Mexico you'll likely have a notary at the venue. Catering norms differ too — open bar is the default in Latin America but rare in much of Europe, where pairing wine by course is the norm. Our country and city guides flag these differences so you don't discover them three weeks before the wedding. Pick a destination below to see what's specific to your case.