Wedding Photography
1–2 Hour Wedding Photography
Short wedding coverage is rarely a short job.
Let’s talk honestly.
If you’re planning a small ceremony in 2026 Britain, chances are you’ve looked at photography prices and thought:
“It’s only an hour or two… why does it cost that much?”
With living costs still biting, mortgages harder to secure, and house deposits swallowing savings, it makes complete sense that many couples would rather put money towards a home or honeymoon than a full-day wedding package.
If I were getting married right now, I’d probably be thinking the same way.
But here’s the perspective you don’t usually hear — from a full-time professional wedding photographer. No fluff. No sales pitch. Just the reality of how 1–2 hour bookings actually work, from both sides.
Why 1–2 Hour Weddings Are Increasing
Small weddings are no longer unusual. They’re normal.
Registry office ceremonies.
Micro weddings.
Second marriages.
Elopements with just two witnesses.
Across the UK, couples are choosing to:
Keep things simple
Avoid debt
Spend wisely
Focus on what matters most
And that’s genuinely admirable.
But photography pricing hasn’t shrunk in the same way the guest lists have — and that’s where the confusion often starts.
1–2 Hour Wedding Photography — From a Couple’s Point of View
Let’s start with your side.
Because your logic is sound.
“We’re Only Looking for 1–2 Hours Because…”
1) We’re on a Very Tight Budget
Maybe you’re saving for a deposit.
Maybe you’ve got childcare costs.
Maybe you simply don’t want to start married life in debt.
That’s responsible. Sensible. Grown-up.
You’re not wrong for wanting to control spending.
2) We Only Want the Ceremony Covered
You’re getting married at a registry office.
You don’t want prep shots.
You’re not having a big evening party.
You just want:
The vows
A few confetti shots
Some family photos
A couple of portraits
That feels like an hour or two. Straightforward.
3) There’s Only the Two of Us
If it’s just you, maybe two witnesses, and a short ceremony — it doesn’t feel like it needs “a full wedding package.”
Totally understandable.
4) We’re Not Sure We See the Value in Photography
This is the honest one.
Some couples simply think:
“It’s just photos.”
And that’s fine. Not everyone places the same value on imagery.
Guests have phones.
Phones are good these days.
You’ll get a few pictures.
From your perspective, paying hundreds (or more) for 1–2 hours can feel excessive.
And I get why you’d think that.
Now Let’s Look at It From a Professional Photographer’s Perspective
This is the bit most couples never see.
Although I may physically photograph your wedding for 1–2 hours…
It is almost never a 1–2 hour job.
Let me show you why.
The Real Time Breakdown of a “2 Hour” Wedding
Here’s a realistic, conservative breakdown of what goes into even the smallest booking.
Admin – Minimum 30–60 Minutes
Even the tiniest wedding requires:
Email conversations
Quote preparation
Contracts
Invoicing
Payment processing
Diary management
Answering questions
That’s before I even pick up a camera.
Travel – At Least 1 Hour
Most venues are:
20–30 minutes away
Often further
You allow extra time for traffic because you cannot be late to a wedding.
That’s roughly an hour minimum just travelling.
Parking & Logistics
Registry offices often:
Have limited parking
Charge for parking
Require walking equipment from nearby car parks
It adds time and small costs that stack up.
Gear Preparation
Professional wedding photographers rarely bring one camera.
We bring:
Two professional bodies
Multiple lenses
Spare batteries
Backup memory cards
Sometimes lighting
Even if nothing goes wrong, we prepare as if it might — because your wedding isn’t repeatable.
The Ceremony (1–2 Hours)
During that time we are:
Reading the room
Watching for emotional reactions
Moving discreetly
Anticipating moments before they happen
Working silently under pressure
It’s not casual snapping. It’s constant decision-making.
Backing Up Your Images
After I leave:
Images are transferred
Backed up immediately
Stored on secondary drives
Archived safely
That’s your safety net.
Editing – 3 to 4 Hours Minimum
Even with AI tools improving workflow, editing still includes:
Colour correction
Exposure balancing
Cropping and composition refinement
Removing distractions
Matching skin tones
Curating your final gallery
Short wedding ≠ quick edit.
Total Time Invested?
A 1–2 hour wedding typically equals:
7–9 hours of actual work.
Which is a full working day for most people.
And that’s before we talk about business overheads.
The Equipment Reality
You’re not hiring someone with a £700 camera.
Most full-time professionals carry:
Two camera bodies (around £2,000 each)
Professional lenses (£1,000–£2,000 each)
Backup equipment
Professional editing software (£100+ per month)
Professional-grade computers
Archiving systems
Insurance
A business vehicle
Conservatively, you’re hiring £8,000–£12,000 worth of equipment and infrastructure.
Plus the years of experience behind it.
“But It’s Only Two Hours — Why Is There a Minimum Fee?”
Here’s the honest answer.
A Saturday 2-hour booking:
Blocks the entire day
Prevents accepting a full-day wedding
Still carries the same admin and editing time
So full-time photographers price short bookings at a minimum level to make the business viable.
It’s not greed.
It’s sustainability.
Once you remove:
Tax
Insurance
Software
Equipment replacement
Fuel
Business expenses
That “£400 for two hours” doesn’t translate to £200 per hour take-home pay.
Not even close.
Why Some Professionals Do Take Small Weddings
Here’s where it gets balanced.
Many pros (myself included) will absolutely take small weddings for several reasons:
Midweek availability
Off-season dates
A personal connection with the couple
Gaps in the calendar
Love of intimate ceremonies
Small weddings can be beautiful. Emotional. Powerful.
Sometimes they’re more meaningful than big 150-guest days.
But we still have to apply minimum pricing to make it workable.
Why Hobby Photographers Often Accept Lower Budgets
Now for another honest truth.
Hobby photographers are often more willing to take on 1–2 hour weddings at smaller budgets.
And that’s not a criticism — it’s simply structure.
A hobby photographer may:
Have a full-time job elsewhere
Not rely on photography for mortgage payments
Not carry full business overheads
Not need to protect weekend availability
They may happily shoot for £150–£300 because:
It’s extra income
It’s experience-building
It’s something they enjoy on the side
And for some couples, that works perfectly.
There is nothing wrong with that route — as long as you understand:
Backup plans may differ
Experience handling pressure may vary
Editing style and consistency may differ
It’s about choosing what level of risk and investment you’re comfortable with.
The Emotional Reality (From Years of Experience)
Here’s what I’ve seen repeatedly.
Couples who originally say:
“We’re not that bothered about photos.”
Often return years later saying:
“Those photos mean everything now.”
Parents pass away.
Grandparents age.
Life moves fast.
Even the smallest registry office wedding becomes part of your history.
And you can’t recreate it.
We’re Not Ripping You Off
I promise you this:
Full-time wedding photographers are not sitting around thinking of ways to squeeze money out of couples.
We’re trying to:
Deliver a standard we’re proud of
Protect your memories properly
Run sustainable businesses
Replace equipment when it fails
Pay tax and insurance
Support our own families
That minimum fee isn’t about punishing small weddings.
It’s about covering the unseen 80% of the job.
If You’re Considering a 1–2 Hour Booking
Here’s my honest advice:
Have a clear idea of what you want covered
Be realistic about professional minimum fees
Decide whether you want full-time experience or hobby-level pricing
Consider weekday or off-season dates
And most importantly:
Have an open conversation with the photographer.
Any decent professional will explain things clearly and respectfully.
Final Thoughts
If you’re planning a small wedding because it’s financially sensible — I genuinely respect that.
If you’re unsure whether photography is worth the investment — that’s fair too.
But now you know what’s behind that “2 hour” quote.
It’s not two hours.
It’s preparation, experience, protection, editing, insurance, infrastructure — and a professional who cares enough not to cut corners.
If that aligns with what you want, fantastic.
If a hobby photographer suits your situation better, that’s okay too.
Just go in informed.
Because when the day is over, the cake is gone, and the confetti has been swept up…
The photographs are what remain.
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Deposits are only £100 and as I’m only accepting 30 weddings a year going forward, dates are booking up fast!
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