Bride getting ready by the window — planning a German wedding from abroad
Planning from abroad

Impossible? It Just Needs Someone on the Ground.

Planning a wedding is work. Planning one in another country, in another language, in another legal system, can feel impossible. It is not. Here is how we do it together.

1

We Meet (On Screen)

A relaxed video call, scheduled in your time zone, not mine. You tell me your vision, I tell you honestly whether I am the right fit. No pressure, no scripts.

2

Your Date Is Secured

A simple English-language contract and a retainer lock in your date. From that moment, I am your person in Germany.

3

We Find Your Place

Castle or grand hotel? City loft or a ceremony by the canals of the Spreewald? I suggest venues matched to your vision, guest count, season and light — including permits, capacities, curfews, and where the tour buses arrive at 10 a.m.

4

The Paperwork, Demystified

Many of my couples handle the legal marriage at home and hold their real ceremony in Germany, which keeps things beautifully simple. If you want a legally binding German wedding, I will point you to the right offices and English-speaking officiants. Either way, you will know your options early.

5

The Timeline

Four to six weeks before the wedding, we build your day hour by hour: light, travel times, family formals, buffer for champagne. You will receive a written timeline your families and vendors can follow too.

6

The Day Itself

I arrive early, I stay calm, I speak the language, and I quietly fix the small things before you notice them. Your only job is to be present.

7

Your Story, Delivered

A sneak peek within 48 hours. The full gallery within four weeks, ready to download wherever you are. Albums and prints ship worldwide.

Bridesmaids in satin robes at Schloss Neuhardenberg Bride in window light while getting ready Bride with champagne on the wedding morning Getting ready at Soho House Berlin
Ring exchange at an outdoor ceremony

Ready When You Are

Begin With Step 1