What Comes First When Planning a Wedding?

Step-by-step guide for the thoughtful Muslim bride

1. Vision & Budget

  • Talk with your fiancé and families about expectations.
  • Set a realistic budget (split by families or joint).
  • This affects the guest list, venue, trousseau, and everything else.

2. Choose a Wedding Date

  • Consider meaningful or blessed Islamic dates (e.g., Sha’ban, Dhul-Hijjah).
  • Avoid Ramadan or Muharram unless purposeful.
  • Use a wedding date checklist to guide your choice.

3. Draft a Guest List

  • Create a rough guest count early—this impacts venue size and catering costs.
  • Include family, friends, community, and out-of-town guests.

4. Book Your Venue

  • Based on your guest list and budget, secure your venue quickly.
  • Ensure it’s available on your date and allows your style (e.g., gender-separated seating, halal catering, prayer space).

5. Prepare Your Trousseau (Jahaiz)

  • Begin early, especially if including clothing, skincare, Qur’an, prayer items, home goods, or jewelry.
  • Customize based on your cultural background and personal style.
  • Budget and timeline matter—a gradual approach avoids last-minute stress.

6. Hire Priority Vendors

  • Photographer & videographer
  • Makeup artist
  • Caterer & baker
  • Nikkah officiant / imam
  • Wedding planner or coordinator (if using one)

7. Plan the Details

  • Invitations, outfits, décor, color theme, gift boxes, favors, etc.
  • Don’t forget nikkah paperwork, wali permissions, or travel documents if it’s a destination wedding.
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