If you’re asking this, you’re not trying to cut corners.
You’re trying to make a thoughtful decision without turning your wedding into a twelve-hour production.
Most couples aren’t wondering how much photography they can get.
They’re wondering how much they need for the day to feel fully remembered.
The short answer
There isn’t one number that’s right for everyone.
Wedding photography coverage isn’t about filling time.
It’s about covering the parts of the day that matter to you, without rushing through them.
That’s the difference between choosing hours based on a package and choosing them based on a story.
What actually determines how many hours you need
1. How your day is structured
The more spread out your day is, the more coverage you’ll need.
Things that add time:
Getting ready in separate locations
A larger wedding party
A ceremony and reception in different places
Travel time between locations
If everything happens in one place, fewer hours can still feel full and complete.
2. What moments matter most to you
This is the part most couples skip.
Ask yourselves:
Do you want getting-ready moments documented, or just the ceremony and reception?
Do you care about candid time with guests?
Are family moments important to you?
Do you want space for portraits without feeling rushed?
Coverage isn’t about photographing everything.
It’s about protecting the moments you’ll want to return to later.
3. Whether you’re doing a first look
A first look doesn’t mean more photos.
It usually means more breathing room.
Couples who choose a first look often:
Spread portraits throughout the day
Feel less pressure on the timeline
Spend more time actually being together
This can make a shorter coverage window feel calmer, not compressed.
What different coverage lengths tend to include
(These are not rules. Just reference points.)
Around 6 hours
Best for:
One location
A shorter guest list
Ceremony + reception focus
Minimal getting ready coverage
This works beautifully when the day is simple and intentional.
Around 8 hours
Best for:
Full getting ready moments
A first look
Ceremony, portraits, and reception coverage
Time with guests that doesn’t feel rushed
This is often the sweet spot for couples who want a complete story without overextending the day.
10+ hours or full-day coverage
Best for:
Multiple locations
Larger weddings
Heirloom-focused documentation
Couples who value slow pacing and depth
This isn’t about “more photos.”
It’s about giving the day space to unfold naturally.
What happens when couples book too little coverage
This isn’t meant to scare you. Just to be honest.
When coverage is too tight:
Moments get rushed
Portraits feel transactional
Time with guests gets squeezed
The day starts to feel scheduled instead of lived
The photos may still be beautiful.
But the experience feels different.
How I help couples decide
I don’t believe in upselling hours.
I believe in listening.
Before we ever finalize coverage, we talk through:
Your timeline
Your priorities
The kind of day you want to have, not just how it looks
My job is to help you choose enough coverage that your wedding feels remembered, not managed.
If you’re still unsure
That’s normal.
Most couples don’t know how many hours they need until someone helps them think it through.
If you want a calm, honest conversation about what makes sense for your day, I’m always happy to help.
If you’d like to take the next step
If you’re still in research mode, you’re welcome to keep reading and taking your time.
If you’re further along and want help thinking through your day, here are a few places to go next:
Learn more about how I work
A little more about my approach, what I value, and how I move through a wedding day.
→ About MeView recent wedding photos
Real weddings, real pacing, real moments. This is the best way to see if my work feels like what you’re hoping for.
→ PortfolioReach out when you’re ready
If you want to talk through coverage, timelines, or whether we’d be a good fit, you can get in touch here. No pressure.
→ Contact