If you’re newly engaged and trying to figure out what wedding planning “cost” really means, you’re not alone, because people use that phrase to mean two totally different things:
- The cost of the wedding (venue + food + florals + everything), and
- The cost of planning support (coordination/partial planning/full planning)
As a planner & coordinator with 10+ years in the event industry and a capped calendar (I take up to 12 exclusive weddings per year), here’s how I explain it to couples in Charlottesville and Central Virginia.
The short answer: planning is a line item, but it affects every line item
In your total wedding budget, “planning” is its own expense, but it’s also the expense that often protects the rest of your investment.
Because here’s the truth I tell every couple early: If you don’t hire a planner or coordinator, you’re not skipping the job, you’re assigning it to yourselves (or your family). And that means you’ll spend your wedding day answering questions, handling timelines, and solving problems… instead of enjoying the day with your new spouse.
What “wedding planning cost” usually means (in real life)
1) Event coordination (the “run the day” role)
This is the service that makes sure your wedding day actually happens the way you intended.
Typical range in this market: $2,500-$4,000
What it generally covers:
- Creating / managing your wedding-day timeline & floor plans
- Vendor confirmations and final walkthrough touchpoints
- Ceremony & reception flow management
- Cueing music, processional timing, and transitions
- Handling inevitable curveballs (weather shifts, missing boutonniere, late shuttle, etc.)
What couples often misunderstand:
Coordination is not “someone to show up and be helpful.” It’s leadership + logistics + decision-making under pressure.
2) Partial planning (the “support + strategy” role)
This is for couples who want to be involved but don’t want the mental load of figuring everything out alone.
Typical range in this market: $4,500–$10,000 (depending on scope; sometimes higher if it leans closer to full planning)
What it generally covers:
- Budget guidance and prioritization (where to spend vs. where to simplify)
- Vendor recommendations and booking strategy
- Design direction support (enough to keep decisions cohesive and efficient)
- Timeline planning that starts earlier and reduces last-minute scrambling
How to choose between them:
- If you’re organized, decisive, and love project-managing: coordination may be enough.
- If you’re busy, unsure where to start, or want to prioritize enjoying engagement: partial planning pays dividends quickly.
The budget line items that matter most (and how planning interacts with each)
Here’s how I recommend thinking about the major categories:
- Venue + Catering: the backbone (often the biggest portion). Planning helps you avoid contract pitfalls and service mismatches.
- Planner/Coordinator: the experience-protector. This is the line item that lets you actually attend your wedding.
- Photo/Video: the memory-maker. Planning helps ensure timelines and lighting realities match expectations.
- Music: the energy driver. Planning makes transitions feel intentional instead of awkward.
- Florals + Décor: where “Pinterest pressure” lives. Planning helps you spend where it shows and trim what doesn’t.
- Rentals: the silent budget escalator. Planning prevents “death by a thousand upgrades.”
- Stationery: often underestimated. Planning keeps it aligned with logistics (not just aesthetics).
- Beauty: schedule-sensitive. Planning keeps it from derailing the whole day.
- Cake/Dessert: easy to overspend unless you’re intentional. Planning helps you choose what guests actually enjoy.
Two hidden costs couples forget (and how to plan for them)
1) Gratuity
Gratuity isn’t always included, and it adds up fast when you have:
- catering staff, bar staff
- hair/makeup team
- photographers/videographers
- transportation drivers
2) Vendor meals
Vendor meals are real, and they matter, because your vendors are hard at work for 10+ hours making your day amazing, and they need sustenance.
This is a common “surprise cost” when couples finalize headcounts and realize they need:
- meals for photo/video
- band/DJ
- planner/coordinator team
A planner/coordinator flags this early so it’s not an end-of-budget shock.
How to evaluate ROI: “What am I buying with $2,000–$10,000?”
Here’s my blunt but loving take:
You’re buying the ability to enjoy the wedding you’re paying for.
A planner/coordinator’s ROI shows up as:
- fewer last-minute decisions made in a panic
- fewer preventable fees (overtime, missed deliveries, timeline domino effects)
- smoother guest experience (which is what couples remember emotionally)
- less family stress (no one wants their mom managing vendor questions in cocktail hour)
- a day that feels like a celebration, not a production you’re running
If you’re not hiring a planner, ask yourselves:
- Who will cue the ceremony?
- Who will handle a vendor who’s late?
- Who will keep the timeline moving?
- Who will solve problems without asking you?
- Who will run the room while you’re taking photos?
If the answer is “we’ll figure it out,” that’s the job, and you deserve to be off the clock on your wedding day.
A simple way to frame your budget (without spreadsheets taking over your life)
- Choose your top 2 priorities (examples: florals + photos, or food + dancing).
- Spend intentionally there.
- Simplify everywhere else.
- Protect the day with planning or coordination so you can actually feel it.
The planning cost is the cost of being present
When couples ask me “how much does wedding planning cost,” I want them to hear this:
Planning isn’t just an expense. It’s the difference between hosting your wedding and attending it.
If you’ve got a wedding in Charlottesville or Central Virginia, and you care about value and quality time together, build planning support into your budget early. It’s one of the few line items that affects every other line item, and your experience of the day.