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A realistic timeline for planning a Singapore wedding
Ballrooms book a year or more out and auspicious dates go first — here’s when to lock your venue, vendors and planner.
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Day-of coordination vs full planning: which do you need?
The three levels of help explained honestly — how to tell which one fits your wedding, your time and your budget.
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Planning a multicultural wedding in Singapore
Tea ceremonies, bersanding, Indian rituals and ROM — how to honour two traditions in one weekend without exhausting everyone.
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A realistic Singapore wedding budget, broken down
Where the money actually goes — venue, catering, florals, photography — and where a planner helps you spend it better.
Read the post → Common questions
Wedding planning, answered
For full or partial planning, most couples reach us 9–14 months out, and the sought-after hotel ballrooms and garden venues are gone a year or more ahead — sooner still for auspicious dates. Day-of coordination can come later, though we still begin working with you four to six weeks before the day. Even if your date is close, do talk to us; we’ll be honest about what we can take on well.
Day-of coordination is for couples who’ve planned everything and just need it run flawlessly — we step in a month or so out to build the run sheet and manage the day. Partial planning joins three to five months out to close the gaps on a wedding you’ve already started. Full planning is one creative partner across the whole journey, from first idea to last dance. Our Planning Package Finder helps you see which fits.
Yes, gladly. We plan Chinese tea ceremonies, Malay bersanding and kenduri, Indian rituals, Eurasian and ROM celebrations — and weddings that blend two traditions across a weekend. We work closely with your families, officiants and any religious requirements so every custom that matters to you is honoured, and the logistics around it run smoothly.
Our fees are a flat studio fee for the planning work, not a percentage of your wedding spend — so our advice is never skewed toward making you spend more. The indicative fees you see start from $1,800 for day-of coordination and scale with the size of your wedding, the number of events and venues, and how much design we commission. We confirm an exact, fixed fee at your consultation.
No. We recommend venues, florists, photographers and other vendors purely on whether they’re right for your wedding and budget, and we’re transparent about every cost. You contract and pay vendors directly; we manage the relationships and timelines on your behalf.
Deliberately few. We’re a small studio and cap how many weddings we plan in any month so each couple gets real attention — and so the planners you meet at your consultation are the ones running your day, not a handed-off junior. It does mean popular dates fill early, so it’s worth enquiring sooner rather than later.
Often, yes — and being budget-aware is part of how we work. Day-of coordination is the most accessible way to bring us in, and even within full planning we’ll tell you honestly where to spend and where to hold back. We’d rather plan a beautiful, considered wedding within your means than push you toward one you’ll feel later.
Everything you share — your guest list, vendor contracts, family details — stays private under Singapore’s Personal Data Protection Act (PDPA). We use it purely to plan and run your wedding, and nothing reaches anyone outside your wedding team unless you ask us to.