Create a schedule for your wedding – fast, beautiful & stress-free
A good Wedding Timeline is more than just a list of times: It is your safety net. With this Schedule Generator, you can build a structured daily routine (ceremony, reception, photos, dinner, speeches, party) in minutes – including buffer times, templates, and export.
Why a schedule saves your wedding (and your nerves)
Whether a big celebration with 120 guests or a small party in the garden: A clear schedule for the wedding makes the difference between "everything runs smoothly" and "where is the DJ actually?". In practice, the daily schedule rarely fails due to major disasters – but rather due to small things: Congratulations take longer, the group photo drags on, a taxi is late, or the kitchen needs fifteen minutes more. This is exactly where a cleanly planned wedding timeline helps.
This generator is structured so that you don't start from scratch: You choose a template (e.g., classic celebration, civil registry variant, free ceremony) and then adjust the items: Duration, Notes (e.g., "Give rings to Best Man"), Buffer between points, and an Anchor Time (e.g., "Ceremony starts at 14:30"). The calculator automatically calculates the start and end times and shows you the flow as a beautiful timeline and as a table – perfect for sharing with the Best Man, photographer, venue, and vendors.
You can subsequently print the schedule, export it as a Calendar File (.ics) (for Google Calendar/Apple Calendar/Outlook), or copy as text. If you share the link, your settings remain saved in the URL hash – practical for team coordination.
- Start quickly with templates and sensible standard durations
- Flexible adjustment per item (duration, note, order)
- Buffer Times for relaxed transitions
- Export & Print for vendor briefing and daily folder
Note: The generator provides a professional starting point. Depending on location, religion, season, logistics, and vendors, your ideal flow may differ – simply adjust it.
Calculator: Wedding Timeplan & Schedule Generator
Edit Items
Result: Schedule as Timeline & Table
| Start | End | Item | Duration | Note |
|---|
FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions about Wedding Schedules
How long should a ceremony be planned in the schedule?
Plan depending on the type and setting: Civil Registry often 20–40 minutes, free ceremony frequently 35–60 minutes, church ceremony usually 45–75 minutes. Important is not only the ceremony itself, but also the "edges": Arrival, finding seats, music, exit, short congratulations. If you are unsure, choose a realistic time window and set buffers afterwards.
How much time for congratulations & champagne reception?
This is a classic time-eater (in a positive sense). With many guests, congratulations quickly take 20–40 minutes, and the champagne reception adds conversations, group photos, and short walks. As a rule of thumb, 45–90 minutes for champagne reception + snacks works very well – depending on whether the couple photo shoot happens in parallel or everyone waits together.
When is the best slot for couple shooting and group photos?
For the couple shoot, light and tranquility are crucial. Many couples do a "First Look" before the ceremony and schedule the couple shoot directly afterwards or during a quieter phase (e.g., during the champagne reception). Group photos work best if you assign a person (Best Man/Planner) as a "photo coordinator" and define the group list in advance. In the generator, you can add notes, e.g., "Print group list" or "Uncle Heinz first".
How many buffer times are sensible?
In short: more than you think. Buffers don't make the schedule longer – they make it feasible. Typical are 10–15 minutes between items. You need additional extra buffers for location changes, dinner service, games/speeches, and everywhere many people need to be moved at once (entry, buffet, photo spots).
How do I best share the schedule with vendors?
Good practice: Send vendors a clear version as PDF/Print View or .ics (Calendar). Particularly important are: Arrival times, Setup, Soundcheck, photo slots, meal times, "Key Moments" (rings, kiss, cake, first dance), and contact persons at the location. With the generator, you can store notes per item – this saves follow-up questions.
What is the most common error in a wedding timeline?
Planning too tightly and forgetting transitions. The ceremony is planned quickly – but paths, congratulations, toilet stops, changing clothes, technology, and spontaneous conversations are real. A good schedule has a "human-friendly" timing: better a bit of air than hectic sprint moments.
Can I also use the calculator for other events?
Yes: Birthday, corporate event, anniversary, baptism – everywhere items are planned in sequence and with durations. Rename the items and use the .ics export to share your event timing.
Tips & Best Practices: How to make your schedule truly "bulletproof"
1) Start with a fixed point – and plan from there
Set a fixed time as an anchor, e.g., "Start of Ceremony" or "Dinner starts". Everything else can be shifted flexibly. The generator works exactly like this: You define the anchor item and a time, and the rest is cleanly distributed before and after. This creates a coherent daily routine without you having to calculate every time individually.
2) Use buffers strategically (not just "somewhere")
Buffers are most valuable in places where you can control the duration poorly: Congratulations, group photos, buffet phases, conversions, speeches, games. A single buffer of 10 minutes at the end helps little if you planned three critical transitions without air before. Set e.g. 10–15 minutes as standard in the calculator – and extend individual items additionally if you know it will be tight.
3) Make responsibilities visible
A schedule is only "event-ready" if it is clear who initiates what. Good notes are for example: "DJ: Provide microphone", "Best Man: Rings", "Photographer: Group list", "Venue: Light candles", "Catering: Open buffet". Enter this directly as a note for the item – this turns the timeline into a clever director's script.
4) Plan "photo-friendly"
Good photos happen when you don't rush. Build a quiet slot for the couple shoot and prevent all guests from waiting at the same time. Often works: Couple shoot parallel to the champagne reception or a short session at the Golden Hour. And very important: If you have location changes, include travel times plus parking/entry (many underestimate this).
5) Think about energy curve and mood
A perfect wedding timeline doesn't feel like a school timetable. After emotional highlights (ceremony, speeches), a phase to breathe helps (champagne reception, food). Afterwards, the energy rises again (First Dance, Party). Use the schedule to consciously shape this curve – then the celebration feels automatically rounder.
6) Keep a "short version" ready
For vendors and the Best Man, a compact version is gold: the most important times, key moments, contact persons. You can copy the text in the generator or use the print view and create a short overview from it.
✓ Contact persons & phone numbers · ✓ Rings · ✓ Emergency Kit (plasters, safety pins, deodorant) · ✓ Backup for music · ✓ Weather Plan B · ✓ Drink & Snack Breaks
If you like, you can also use this generator as a Lead Magnet ("Schedule as Download"), because many search exactly for this: Create wedding schedule, Wedding timeline, Wedding planning timeline. With the FAQ sections and the tips, the page also ranks significantly better because it answers search intentions holistically.
Wedding Schedule Generator: Plan Your Entire Day in Minutes
The Wedding Schedule Generator creates a complete, minute-accurate timeline for your wedding day. Starting from any ceremony time you enter, it automatically calculates every downstream event — getting ready, transportation, ceremony, cocktail hour, dinner, speeches, first dance, and more — with configurable buffer times between each block.
Templates
Start from pre-built templates: Civil Ceremony, Church Wedding, Outdoor/Garden, Evening-Only Reception. Each loads a realistic default schedule you can customize.
Buffer Times
Add buffer minutes between any two events. Buffers prevent cascading delays — the most common cause of wedding-day stress. Set globally or per event block.
.ics Export
Export the full schedule as a calendar file (.ics). Import into Google Calendar, Apple Calendar, or Outlook — share individual event invites with vendors, photographer, and wedding party.
Shareable URL
Your entire schedule is encoded in the page URL. Copy and share with your partner, planner, or family — they open the exact same schedule without any login or account.
Print / PDF
One-click print-optimized layout. Generate a clean PDF timeline to hand to your venue coordinator, photographer, and officiant on the wedding day.
Timeline + Table View
Switch between a visual timeline (horizontal bar chart by hour) and a clean table view showing event, start time, duration, and responsible person.
Realistic Duration Guide for Each Wedding Block
The most common planning mistake is underestimating how long each block actually takes. Here are realistic durations based on typical German and European weddings:
| Event Block | Minimum | Realistic | Generous | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Getting Ready (Bridal) | 90 min | 2.5 h | 3.5 h | Hair + makeup; always allow more than you think |
| Getting Ready (Groom) | 30 min | 45 min | 60 min | Include boutonnière and pre-ceremony photos |
| First Look + Couple Photos | 20 min | 45 min | 75 min | Golden hour shoot: plan around sunset −90 min |
| Guest Arrival Buffer | 15 min | 30 min | 45 min | Some guests always arrive late; do not start early |
| Civil Ceremony (Standesamt) | 15 min | 25 min | 40 min | Includes signing; Standesamt often strictly timed |
| Church / Religious Ceremony | 45 min | 60–75 min | 90 min | With music, readings, communion; confirm with officiant |
| Cocktail Hour / Aperitif | 45 min | 60–75 min | 90 min | Couple uses this time for couple photos |
| Dinner (3-course sit-down) | 90 min | 2.5 h | 3.5 h | Add 20 min per additional course; speeches eat time |
| Speeches + Toasts | 15 min | 30–45 min | 60 min | 4–6 speakers is common; brief speakers are rare |
| First Dance + Opening Dance | 10 min | 20 min | 30 min | Includes parent dances if planned |
| Dancing / Party | 2 h | 3–4 h | 5+ h | Band/DJ typically plays in 45 min sets with breaks |
| Transport between venues | 15 min | 30 min | 60 min | Add traffic buffer for peak hours and rural routes |
Sample Full-Day Wedding Timeline (Ceremony at 2:00 PM)
| Time | Event | Duration | Responsible |
|---|---|---|---|
| 09:00 | Bridal getting ready begins (hair & makeup) | 3 h | Bridal party + MUA |
| 11:00 | Groom + groomsmen get ready | 45 min | Best man |
| 12:00 | First look + couple portraits | 60 min | Photographer |
| 13:15 | Bridal party photos | 30 min | Photographer |
| 13:45 | Buffer + travel to ceremony venue | 30 min | Transport coordinator |
| 14:15 | Guest arrival / seating | 30 min | Ushers |
| 14:30 → 15:15 (buffer) | ⚠️ Ceremony NOT yet started — guests seated | – | – |
| 15:00 | Ceremony begins | 60 min | Officiant |
| 16:00 | Confetti exit + group photos | 30 min | Photographer |
| 16:30 | Cocktail hour / aperitif | 75 min | Venue / Caterer |
| 17:45 | Grand entrance + dinner | 2 h 30 min | Venue coordinator |
| 19:00 | Speeches (during dinner) | 45 min | MC / Best man |
| 20:15 | Cake cutting | 15 min | Couple + photographer |
| 20:30 | First dance + parent dances | 20 min | DJ / Band |
| 20:50 | Dance floor open | Until end | DJ / Band |
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I share the schedule with my wedding vendors?
Use the "Copy Share Link" button — your entire schedule is encoded in the URL. Anyone who opens the link sees the exact same timeline. For vendors who prefer a document, use the "Print" function to generate a PDF. The .ics export is ideal for your photographer and DJ, who can add the wedding-day events directly to their own calendars with exact start times and durations.
Can I add custom events that are not in the default templates?
Yes. Use the "Add Custom Block" option to insert any event — sand ceremony, unity candle, bouquet toss, fireworks, late-night snack, etc. — at any point in the timeline. Set the name, duration, and whether it is a fixed-time anchor event (like ceremony start) or a floating event that shifts with the surrounding blocks.
What is a "buffer" and why does it matter?
A buffer is empty scheduled time between events — it absorbs delays without breaking the rest of the schedule. Without buffers, a 10-minute photographer delay will cascade through every downstream event. The recommendation: add at least 15 minutes of buffer before the ceremony start, and 20 minutes before the grand entrance. Venues and photographers consistently report that the single biggest source of wedding-day stress is an over-packed schedule with no slack time.
Does the .ics export work with all calendar apps?
.ics (iCalendar) is the universal standard supported by Google Calendar, Apple Calendar, Microsoft Outlook, Thunderbird, and virtually all calendar applications. Each event in your wedding schedule becomes a separate calendar entry with the correct start time, end time, and title. On mobile, tap the .ics file to import directly into your default calendar app. Note: the export creates individual events, not a shared calendar — each person receiving the file imports it to their own calendar.
Embed this Calculator on Your Website
You can integrate this calculator for free into your own website. Get the embed code on our overview page.