She was wearing her mothers dress. The florist had delivered. The band was setting up. Then the fire marshal showed up and shut down the venue because the building permit had expired three years ago and nobody had caught it during the planning process. Sixty-three guests watched as my sister and her husband-to-be stood in the parking lot trying to figure out what to do. They had paid $48,000 in deposits and deposits are not refundable when an event is cancelled. They had eighteen days to find a new venue, rebook vendors, and figure out how to feed sixty-three people. They almost cancelled the wedding entirely.
Almost is not cancel. They found a venue, a restaurant that could host the reception with two weeks notice. They paid $12,000 in additional costs for last-minute changes. The original vendors kept their deposits because the contract terms said deposits are non-refundable for cancellation. The wedding happened. It was not what they planned. It was smaller and simpler and the food was cold because the kitchen was not designed for a wedding dinner for sixty-three. My sister cried through the entire reception, not from happiness, from stress and exhaustion and the feeling that the day had been stolen from her. If they had wedding insurance, all of that would have been covered. The deposits, the additional costs, the difference between what they planned and what they got. They did not have insurance and they paid for it.
Wedding insurance covers financial losses from circumstances that prevent your wedding from happening as planned. Coverage types include venue cancellation, vendor failure, extreme weather, illness or injury, military deployment, and government-mandated shutdowns. The covered events vary by policy and the exclusions are specific, which means reading your policy carefully matters.
Venue cancellation coverage is the most important component for most weddings. If your venue cannot host your event due to fire, structural damage, bankruptcy, or permit issues, cancellation coverage pays for lost deposits and additional costs to find an alternative venue. Without this coverage, a venue bankruptcy can cost $20,000 to $50,000 in non-refundable deposits.
Vendor failure coverage protects against vendors who go out of business, fail to show up, or provide services that are materially below contract terms. Proving vendor failure is typically harder than proving venue cancellation, which means documentation and clear contracts matter for any claim involving vendor failure.
Weather coverage for extreme events is included in most policies but standard rain or snow is not considered an insurable event. A hurricane that forces evacuation of your venue is covered. A light drizzle that makes your outdoor ceremony uncomfortable is not. The threshold for what constitutes extreme weather varies by policy and location.
Wedding insurance costs $200 to $600 for most policies covering events with budgets between $20,000 and $75,000. The cost scales with coverage amount and event risk factors. Outdoor venues, winter weddings, and destinations in hurricane or flood zones cost more to insure. The coverage amounts typically range from $10,000 to $100,000 or more for high-budget events.
Consider the alternative: a single venue bankruptcy costs more than a decade of insurance premiums for most weddings. A weather-related evacuation during peak hurricane season could cost $15,000 to $40,000 in lost deposits and relocation costs. The math is simple and the cost is minimal relative to the financial exposure.
Karen Wu, a wedding insurance specialist who has handled over 600 claims in her twelve-year career, sees the same pattern repeatedly: “Couples who skip wedding insurance are almost always couples who think nothing bad will happen. And for most of them, nothing does. But for the ones where something does happen, the ones who did not have insurance are in crisis while the ones who did have insurance are dealing with inconvenience instead of financial catastrophe. The couples who call me in tears after losing $30,000 in deposits all say the same thing: I wish I had gotten the insurance.”
Most couples assume their vendors carry their own liability coverage that protects them in case of vendor failure. Some vendors do, but many do not, and the coverage they carry typically does not protect the couple, it protects the vendor. If a photographer goes bankrupt and keeps your retainer, your only recourse is against the photographer directly, which is often worthless if the photographer has no assets. Vendor failure insurance protects you directly.
Another common assumption is that credit card protections will cover disputes with vendors. Credit card protections provide limited dispute resolution for goods and services not delivered as contracted, but they do not cover the full spectrum of wedding vendor failures and typically do not cover consequential damages like the cost of finding replacement services on short notice.
The most important thing to understand about wedding insurance is that it must be purchased before the event. Once you are within days of your wedding, most policies will not cover new issues that arise. If you are planning a wedding in a hurricane zone or during a pandemic or in a location with known weather risks, purchase your policy well in advance and make sure the policy covers the specific risks that apply to your situation.
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