A timeline should answer who, what, and when for the moments that require coordination. It should not make the couple feel rushed through every minute.
Guest arrival and cocktail hour
Allow time for family photos, wedding-party photos, and guest movement. Confirm where music will play, when the wedding party lines up, and who tells the DJ everyone is ready for introductions.
Introductions
Provide names in the correct order and write pronunciation notes. Decide whether the wedding party enters individually, in pairs, or as a group. Select an entrance song or allow the DJ to choose within your style.
Dinner and toasts
Coordinate the catering service style with blessings, welcome remarks, and toasts. Avoid placing too many long speeches in one block. Confirm who needs a microphone and whether speakers will stand or remain seated.
Special dances
The first dance may happen immediately after introductions or later after dinner. Family dances can be combined or separated. Share the exact song versions and any planned fade-out points.
Open dancing
Give the dance floor a clear opening moment. The best time depends on dinner service, sunset photos, venue schedule, and the number of remaining formalities. Once dancing begins, repeated interruptions can make it harder to rebuild momentum.
Final song and send-off
Work backward from the venue end time. Leave enough time for the final song, gathering guests, distributing send-off items, and moving outside. Confirm whether the photographer and transportation will still be present.
Add buffer time
Small delays are normal. A timeline with no buffer can create unnecessary pressure. Decide which formalities can move, shorten, or be skipped if the schedule changes.