Generic wedding checklists fail Bangalore couples for one simple reason: they don't account for the city's specific realities. Bangalore has muhurta date clustering that creates extreme venue demand in November-January. It has unpredictable weather year-round. It has traffic patterns that can delay a photographer by 2 hours. It has a vendor ecosystem with its own booking rhythms and pricing calendars. This checklist is built specifically for Bangalore weddings — every recommendation comes from real experience planning in this city.
Count backwards from your wedding date. If your wedding is in November 2026, "12 months out" is November 2025. Adjust each milestone accordingly. If you're starting with less than 12 months, compress the first three phases but never skip them — just do them faster.
12 Months Out — Foundation
This is the most important month. The decisions you make now determine 80% of your wedding experience. Do not rush this phase.
- Set your total budget. Be honest and specific. Include everything: venue, catering, decor, photography, planner, outfits, jewellery, invitations, transport, gifts, honeymoon, and a 10-15% buffer. Write this number down. For detailed budget guidance, see our Bangalore wedding cost guide.
- Draft your guest list. Start with the maximum number you could possibly invite, then apply the venue and budget filter. Every 50 guests you add costs ₹1.5-5 lakhs more. Be realistic — the guest list is the primary budget lever.
- Get muhurta dates. If you're having a Hindu ceremony, consult your family priest or astrologer now. You need 3-5 possible dates to have negotiating flexibility with venues. Don't lock a venue before having muhurta options.
- Research and hire a wedding planner. This should be your first vendor hire — a good planner helps you make every subsequent decision better. Meet 3-5 planners, check their portfolios and references, and sign a contract. See our guide to Bangalore's best wedding planners.
- Shortlist and visit 5-8 venues. Visit in person, at the same time of day as your planned event. Ask about availability on your muhurta dates, per-plate costs, venue rental, setup/teardown timelines, and capacity. For venue guidance, see our best venues guide.
- Book your venue. Sign the contract and pay the advance (typically 25-50% of venue cost). For peak season muhurta dates at premium venues, the advance secures your slot — delays risk losing the date. Get cancellation terms in writing.
10 Months Out — Core Vendors
- Book your photographer/videographer. Top photographers book out 12+ months for peak dates. Shortlist 3, review full wedding albums (not just highlights), meet in person, and check chemistry. The photographer will spend more time with you on your wedding day than almost anyone else — personality fit matters.
- Book your decorator. If your planner provides decor (like Panigrahana's integrated model), this is already covered. If not, hire a separate decorator now. Share your venue, colour preferences, and Pinterest board. Get an initial proposal and budget estimate.
- Start outfit shopping. Bridal lehengas from top designers (Sabyasachi, Manish Malhotra, Tarun Tahiliani) require 6-8 months for custom orders. Even off-the-rack designer pieces need 3-4 months for alterations. Start browsing and booking appointments at Bangalore's designer stores and multi-brand boutiques.
- Book caterer (if external). If your venue doesn't provide catering, book your caterer now. Schedule a tasting within 2 months. For hotel venues, the catering is usually in-house — begin menu discussions.
- Finalise your event list. How many events? Typical Bangalore wedding: Mehendi + Sangeet + Wedding Ceremony + Reception. Some add Haldi, Engagement, Cocktail Night. Each additional event adds ₹2-8 lakhs to the total budget. Be intentional.
8 Months Out — Design & Details
- Finalise decor concept. Your decorator should present a mood board and detailed proposal with itemised costs. Review, negotiate, and sign the decor contract. Lock in the colour palette, mandap style, lighting approach, and floral direction. Changes after this point get increasingly expensive.
- Book entertainment. DJ, live band, classical musicians for the ceremony, sangeet choreographer — book all entertainment vendors now. Popular DJs and bands book out 6-8 months for peak dates.
- Book mehendi artist. Top Bangalore mehendi artists (especially rajasthani-style specialists) book 6+ months ahead for peak season.
- Book makeup artist. Bridal makeup trials happen later, but book your MUA now to secure the date. Popular MUAs like those from the Namrata Soni or Shaan Muttathil network have limited Bangalore availability.
- Start invitation design. If you're doing printed invitations, the design, printing, and distribution process takes 3-4 months. Start with a designer now. Digital invitations can wait until 4 months out.
- Research honeymoon. If you're planning an international honeymoon, visa processing, flight booking, and hotel reservations should start now — especially for popular November-January travel periods.
6 Months Out — Commitments & Confirmations
- Send save-the-dates. Especially important for outstation guests who need to book flights and accommodation. Include the city, dates, and a note about accommodation options near the venue.
- Finalise guest list. Lock the number. Changes after this point affect seating, catering orders, and decor scale. Aim for a firm count within 10% of final.
- Book accommodation for outstation guests. Block hotel rooms near your venue. For venues outside the city (Golfshire, Amita Rasa), this is critical — limited nearby options fill up. Negotiate group rates and arrange shuttle transport.
- Menu tasting. Schedule tastings with your caterer or hotel. Bring 2-3 family members with different palates. Finalise the menu and per-plate cost. Confirm vegetarian/non-vegetarian ratios.
- Order bridal outfits. If not already done, this is the absolute deadline for custom designer orders. Place orders and schedule first fitting for 3 months out.
- Legal: marriage registration. In Karnataka, marriage registration requires: application to the sub-registrar's office, documentation (age proof, address proof, photos, invitation card), and a waiting period of 30 days after application. Start the process if you want the certificate close to the wedding date.
4 Months Out — Logistics & Coordination
- Send formal invitations. Mail printed invitations or send digital invitations with full event details, venue addresses, dress codes, and RSVP deadline. Include a Google Maps link for each venue.
- Book priest/officiant. Confirm your priest for the ceremony, discuss the ceremony format, timelines, and any specific rituals. Provide the muhurta details and venue logistics.
- Finalise transport plan. Guest buses, valet arrangements, vendor vehicle access. For out-of-city venues, create a detailed transport schedule with pickup points, departure times, and coordinator contacts.
- Bridal makeup trial. Schedule your trial 3-4 months before the wedding. Try the full look: makeup, hair, and dupatta draping. Photograph in natural light AND artificial light (you'll experience both). If unhappy, you have time to book a different MUA.
- Order wedding favours. Custom favours need 6-8 weeks for production. Simple options (packaged sweets, candles, small plants) can be ordered 4-6 weeks out.
- Sangeet planning. Choreography rehearsals should start now if you're planning performance pieces. Book 8-12 rehearsal sessions over the next 3 months.
- Ring and mangalsutra shopping. If not already done, finalise wedding rings and mangalsutra. Custom designs need 4-6 weeks.
2 Months Out — Finalisation
- Confirm all vendors in writing. Email every vendor: photographer, decorator, caterer, DJ, MUA, mehendi, priest, transport, florist. Reconfirm date, time, location, and deliverables. Get written acknowledgement.
- Final guest count. RSVP deadline should be 6-8 weeks before the wedding. Follow up with non-responders. Submit the final count to the caterer and venue (most allow 5-10% adjustment until 2 weeks before).
- Outfit fittings. Final fittings for bride and groom outfits. Ensure all alterations are complete at least 3 weeks before the wedding. Try on with jewellery and accessories for the full look.
- Seating chart (if applicable). For sit-down dinners, create a seating plan. Group by family clusters and social circles. Avoid seating divorced relatives or feuding family members adjacent. Your planner can advise on diplomacy.
- Create the wedding day timeline. Minute-by-minute schedule: when does hair and makeup start, when does the baraat arrive, when is the phera, when does dinner service begin, when does music stop (10 PM outdoor BBMP rule). Share with all vendors and family coordinators.
- Weather check. Check the 14-day forecast. If rain is possible, activate your indoor backup plan with the venue and decorator. Better to prepare early than to scramble on the day.
- Bangalore-specific: traffic rehearsal. Drive the route from the bride's getting-ready location to the venue at the same time of day as the wedding. Note travel time. Add 30-45 minutes as buffer in your timeline.
1 Month Out — Final Preparations
- Final venue walkthrough. Walk the venue with your planner, decorator, and photographer. Confirm mandap placement, decor layout, power supply, lighting positions, guest flow path, and emergency exits. Take photos and share with all vendors.
- Final payments schedule. Confirm remaining payment amounts and deadlines with all vendors. Most require final payment 1-2 weeks before or on the wedding day. Prepare cheques, UPI details, or cash as per vendor preference.
- Delegate day-of responsibilities. Assign a family member as the "family coordinator" for each side. This person handles family-specific questions so your planner can focus on vendor management. Brief them on timeline and emergency contacts.
- Pack emergency kit. Safety pins, sewing kit, stain remover, headache medicine, antacids, phone chargers, extra phone batteries, tissues, blotting papers, deodorant, mints, cash, and a copy of all vendor contracts.
- Confirm accommodation check-ins. Reconfirm all hotel room blocks. Send guests their room confirmation details and check-in instructions. For destination venues, send a "welcome guide" with local information.
- Break in your wedding shoes. Wear your ceremony shoes around the house for 1-2 hours daily. Nothing ruins a wedding day faster than blistered feet during a 2-hour ceremony.
1 Week Out — Final Countdown
- Final vendor timeline distribution. Send the complete minute-by-minute timeline to every vendor, every family coordinator, and every bridesmaid/groomsman. Include venue address, parking instructions, vendor coordinator phone numbers, and the planner's mobile number.
- Confirm ceremony materials. Mangalsutra, rings, garlands, puja items, sacred fire materials — confirm everything is purchased and packed. Your priest should provide a list of required items.
- Final headcount to caterer. Submit the absolute final guest count. Most caterers require this 5-7 days before for ingredient ordering.
- Cash envelopes. Prepare cash envelopes for: tips for hotel staff, gifts for the priest, payments for any COD vendors, and petty cash for last-minute purchases on the day.
- Weather monitor. Check daily forecasts. If the forecast changes to rain, brief your decorator on the indoor pivot plan. Ensure the backup space is available and the decorator's contingency materials are on standby.
- Self-care. Sleep 8 hours. Hydrate. Eat properly. Avoid last-minute crash diets or new skincare products. The stress of wedding week affects your skin, energy, and mood — counteract it with rest.
Day-Of — Your Wedding Day
- Morning: Hair and makeup typically start 4-5 hours before the ceremony. Eat a real breakfast — you may not get another proper meal until after midnight. Have your emergency kit accessible. Phone fully charged.
- Let your planner manage everything. This is what you hired them for. If a vendor is late, if the flowers are the wrong shade, if the uncle is upset about seating — let your planner handle it. Your only job today is to be present, be joyful, and get married.
- Trust the timeline. Delays happen at every wedding — the baraat runs long, the ceremony starts 20 minutes late, the turnaround between ceremony and reception takes extra time. Your planner has built buffers into the timeline. Trust the process.
- Eat and hydrate. In the chaos, couples regularly forget to eat or drink water for 8-10 hours. Have your MUA or bridesmaid designated to ensure you drink water every hour and eat something before the reception.
- Be present. Put your phone away during the ceremony. Look at your partner. Listen to the mantras. Feel the warmth of the fire. The decor, the food, the outfits — they're the frame. You are the picture. Be in the moment.
Bangalore-Specific Tips
Monsoon Contingency
Bangalore receives rainfall in two seasons: June-September (southwest monsoon) and October-November (northeast monsoon, lighter but unpredictable). Even in "safe" months like December and January, isolated showers are possible. Every Bangalore wedding, regardless of month, needs an indoor backup plan. The cost of having a backup is negligible compared to the cost of a rained-out ceremony.
Traffic Planning
Bangalore traffic is a genuine wedding-day risk. Key strategies:
- Choose a venue on the same side of the city as most of your guests. A Whitefield guest list should not be at a Bannerghatta venue — that's a 2.5-hour cross-city journey.
- Schedule vendor arrivals 60-90 minutes before their actual needed time. A photographer stuck in Silk Board traffic is not a solvable problem at 4 PM on a Saturday.
- For evening weddings, consider 7:30 PM start times — traffic subsides significantly after 7 PM on weekdays and after 6 PM on weekends.
- For morning ceremonies (muhurta at 10-11 AM), ensure the bride's getting-ready location is within 20 minutes of the venue. Morning traffic from the wrong direction can delay the start of everything.
Muhurta Considerations
Muhurta dates are non-negotiable for many families. The practical implications:
- Peak muhurta weekends (November-January) see 50-100 weddings happening simultaneously in Bangalore. Vendor availability is extremely limited. Book early.
- Some muhurta windows are very specific — "ceremony must begin between 10:47 AM and 11:23 AM." Your timeline must be built around this immovable constraint. Everything else adjusts to accommodate it.
- Multiple muhurta dates give you negotiating flexibility with venues and vendors. If you can only do one specific date, you lose all pricing leverage.
Permits and Regulations
- Noise: BBMP regulations restrict amplified music in outdoor spaces after 10 PM. Indoor spaces can typically go until midnight. Plan your entertainment timeline accordingly. For farmhouse/villa weddings, check with local authorities.
- Fire safety: Large pandal-style setups may require fire NOC from the local fire station. Your venue or planner handles this.
- Alcohol: If serving alcohol at a non-hotel venue, confirm the licensing situation. Hotels have their own licenses. External venues may require a temporary liquor license or BYOB with specific conditions.
Also read: How Much Does a Bangalore Wedding Cost? · Best Wedding Planners Bangalore 2026 · Best Wedding Venues Bangalore 2026 · Wedding Planner Cost India 2026
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